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15th Sunday in Ordinary Time
First Reading
Second Reading
Gospel
Text from Lectionary for Mass My Sisters and Brothers in Christ, This is one of those rare Sunday in Ordinary time in which it is easy to find a connection between all three readings. We are people who are called by God and sent by Him to do His will. The prophet Amos was accused of being a prophet. That sounds a bit strange to us today because we think of prophets as individual people who foretell the future. In the time of Amos there were groups of prophets. One could join such a group in order to make a living! It might have been something like joining a Monastery today-for all the wrong reasons. If one joins a Monastery to make a living or have a career, the motivations are all wrong. Yet it sometimes happens that way. Certainly at some points in history men or women joined Monasteries because it was a way to make sure that they had food and shelter. So to have a group of prophets that one could join does not have to sound to odd. If one is too proud to beg and to soft to work... Obviously such a way to become a prophet brought disgrace and discredit on the calling to be a prophet. This is why Amos takes such great care to disassociate himself from being a prophet: "I was no prophet, nor have I belonged to a company of prophets." Instead, he is clear that he was called directly by God and sent by God to prophesy-and he has no connection with these professional prophets! We hear our Lord Jesus in the Gospel telling the twelve to go out and begin curing people! They have been called earlier in the Gospel and now are sent out on a mission of healing. They are told to take nothing with them except a walking stick. This seems an obvious reference to the manner in which the twelve can misuse the authority entrusted to them. In the history of our Church there is always the struggle against the misuse of authority. Because we are humans this misuse appears over and over again. No law can take away the misuse of authority, but can only keep some check on it. The challenge is for those in authority to keep their hearts and their energies focused on Christ and on His life within them and within other humans.
We can pray today for all those who exercise authority, in the Church, in Civil Government, in Families and in whatever other way to be men and women who live from the divine life within them and who value that divine life in others.
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