Sunday, October 15, 2023

28th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle A - October 15, 2023

 28th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Cycle A

October 15, 2023 – 8:30 and 11am

Our Lady of Grace Parish, Parkton 

 

The Word Opportunity

 

Today’s gospel has led me to learn something about the word opportunity.

 

What I learned is that before the days of modern, deep-water harbors, like the Baltimore or the New York harbor, before the days of these deep-water harbors, a ship had to wait for high tide before it could sail into port. It would wait outside the harbor.

 

The captain would judge when it was just the right time to ride the tide into port. Then he would signal the crew, and they would get started.  

 

In Latin, there was a term for this: ob portu. These two Latin words, ob portu – spelled O-B and P-O-R-T-U – they literally mean outside the port.

 

Our English word opportunity is derived from these words. The idea is that the captain of a ship outside the port had to be ready for the opportunity to move.

 

If he missed this window, he would have to wait for the next tide. So, our word opportunitymeans a chance to do something that might not happen again or at least not soon again.    

 

Our Opportunities 

 

Jesus is concerned today about opportunities and especially missed opportunities.

 

He tells the Parable of the Wedding Banquet. The invited guests decline the invitation. 

 

It seems as if some are just too absorbed in their own lives to pay any attention to this. Others think that their work must take priority. 

 

And some are angry that they are even bothered with this invitation, and they become violent. Now, the passage says that Jesus is speaking this parable to some of the religious leaders of his day. 

 

His point is that some of those to whom God first offered the gift of salvation missed this opportunity to be close to God and part of God’s kingdom. Today, the parable cautions us to be alert to opportunities where we can find God or make God’s kingdom more alive.    

 

Opportunities Lost and Found 

 

For example, parents may regret that they did not go to more of their children’s games or concerts or dance performances. If that is the case, today they might find other opportunities to be with their children and even their grandchildren.

 

Right now, we are all aware of the horrific violence in the Middle East. We might be seeing this at a distance as only the age-old hostility between the Palestinians and the Jews.

 

If so, I suggest we might see this as an opportunity to look more deeply. It is an opportunity for us to look at anti-Semitic, anti-Islamic, or anti-black, anti-Asian, or anti-Hispanic sentiments right here and maybe within ourselves. 

 

We can use this as an opportunity to see the senselessness of prejudice and hatred and the violence that comes from that. We might see that the large-scale violence we are now witnessing on TV starts with individuals and our relationships.

 

And with this awareness, we can use this today as an opportunity to pray. We ask for God’s grace to bring healing and reconciliation to us and everyone.   

 

A final example about opportunities. We may become aware that we have just been slipping in our relationship with God or even neglecting it. 

 

We may have gotten use to watching Mass at home – and get me right, I am glad we have livestreaming for those who cannot be here especially for health reasons. But maybe we’ve been consistently missing the opportunity to be here for the full celebration of the Eucharist and for receiving Communion.

 

And with this awareness, we can now resolve to accept this wonderful opportunity, unlike some of the folks in today’s gospel. We can resolve to be part of this spiritual banquet where we sacramentally receive Jesus. 

 

Conclusion

 

The point is that there can be ob portu or kingdom of God opportunities in our lives. 

 

We don’t want to miss them. Instead, we want to be like the captain of ships of long ago and be ready to sail into port with the high tide.  

 

Sunday, October 8, 2023

27th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle A - October 8, 2023

 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Cycle A

October 8, 2023 – 5pm and 11am

Our Lady of Grace Parish, Parkton 

 

God’s Welcome to the Vineyard

 

Imagine that just before a soul begins his or her life on earth, God takes the soul by the hand and points out a certain place on earth. 

 

God then speaks to this soul or soon-to-be-conceived-and-born person. God explains. 

 

“This is going to be your piece of the vineyard. It will be yours to make of it whatever you can.

 

“All I ask is that you work at it the best you can and get the most out of the soil I give you. 

 

“If you produce grapes that make the choice wine of reconciliation and justice, great; if you only have enough water and nutrients to produce a few grapes that make a small amount of the sherry of humility and kindness, good; if you only have enough time to plant a few seeds or start a few vines that others can bring to a full harvest, you’ll have done well.”  

 

God’s Caution 

 

But God then cautions:

 

“Just don’t make the mistake that too many of my tenants make. They get too caught up in the number of grapes they can coax from the vines. 

 

“My vineyard is about harvesting good grapes, not amassing profits. Remember too, that you are responsible for the part of the vineyard I give you.

 

“Don’t exhaust the grapes you harvest for yourself alone. Don’t leave behind just a dried tangle of dead vines for the next grower.” 

 

God the vineyard owner continues. “And keep in mind that everyone has his or her own piece of the vineyard. 

 

“But there are no dividing lines, no fences, no property markers. Your part of the vineyard is joined to your neighbor’s – so you can do neither good nor evil in the vineyard without affecting the folks next to you and the vines around you.”

 

God’s Reminder 

 

Finally, God says this.

 

“One more thing. And I don’t mean to harp on this, but it is my vineyard.

 

“Not yours. I’m giving you a piece of it because that’s what being God is all about.

 

“An occasional thank you would be nice. But the moment you think the vineyard is yours or that you deserve more and better, your vineyard will become a very unhappy and unproductive place.  

 

“So, go to it.” And with that said, God breathes this soul into a human embryo and another human, or human and divine journey begins. 

 

Conclusion

 

So, the lesson is that we are to be good, responsible tenants of God’s vineyard.

 

That vineyard is the life we have been given. It is the home, the school, the job, the family, the friends, the opportunities, the community, the church, the city, the state, the country, the world we live in.

 

This is what we have been given. This is the vision that Jesus, the Christ gives us. 

 

So, will we produce the choice wine of reconciliation and justice? Or the sherry of humility and kindness? 

 

Will we at least start something good in the limited time and space that we have? Will we leave something good for the next generation? 

 

Will we stay aware that whatever we do affects everyone else? Will we remember to be thankful to God from time to time?   

 

God has welcomed us to his vineyard and given each of us a piece of it. It’s up to us to be good tenants.   

 

And, by the way, this way of seeing today’s and other gospels on the vineyard comes right from Saint Catherine of Siena who lived in the 1300s. I have to give her credit for this homily!