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FIFTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME


cappie

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Suppose you lived in an isolated land where no adult grew beyond 4 feet in height. Would you consider yourself as being short?

 Suppose you grew up in an area where everyone was nearsighted and had to wear glasses to see distant objects. Would you believe you had poor vision?

In each case, the answer would be “no.” 

We only think of ourselves as short when we are in the presence of people who are taller than we are  We only imagine we might have less than 20/20 vision when we realize that there are people who can easily see distant objects without wearing glasses or contact lenses.

The same thing it true when it comes to being aware of our sinfulness our calling and our need for God’s mercy. We become aware of our sins and failings when we are in the presence of good people. A person, for example, who grows up associating only with thieves will hardly think it wrong to steal.

If being in the presence of good people makes us aware of our failings, how much more so does being in the presence of God who is all good and all holy. 

In this Sunday’s readings, we meet three people who are dramatically made aware of their sinfulness when they come in contact with goodness itself, when they come in contact with God, and are called by God despite of their lack of being worthy

In the First Reading (Isaiah 6:1-2a, 3-8), the prophet Isaiah has a vision of God seated on his royal throne surrounded by angels proclaiming, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts.” In response, Isaiah cries out, “Woe is me, I am doomed! For I am a man of unclean lips.” Isaiah realizes his unworthiness before God.

In the Second Reading (1 Corinthians 15:1-11), Saint Paul speaks of himself as “the least of the apostles, not fit to be called an apostle.” Paul’s encounter with the Lord on the road to Damascus completely changed Paul’s understanding of himself. He was not doing good as he imagined, but rather in persecuting the followers of Christ he was opposing God himself.

In the Gospel (Luke 5:1-11), Simon Peter allows Jesus to use his boat as a floating pulpit, and then at the instruction of Jesus he rows out from shore, lowers his nets, and catches an amazing number of fish. What happens leads Peter to realize that he is in the presence of more than an itinerant rabbi. Simon Peter cries out, “Depart from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man.”

Simon Peter, the fisherman, is the first to be called personally by Jesus in Luke’s Gospel. His calling resembles Isaiah’s commissioning in the First Reading: Confronted with the holiness of the Lord, both Peter and Isaiah are overwhelmed by a sense of their sinfulness and inadequacy. Yet each experiences the Lord’s forgiveness and is sent to preach the good news of His mercy to the world.

No one is “fit to be called an apostle,” Paul recognizes in today’s Epistle. But by “the grace of God,” even a persecutor of the Church—as Paul once was—can be lifted up for the Lord’s service.

In the Old Testament, humanity was unfit for the  divine—no man could stand in God’s presence and live (see Exodus 33:20). But in Jesus, we’re made able to speak with Him face-to-face, taste His Word on our tongue.

God’s Word comes to us as it came to Peter, Paul, Isaiah, and today’s Psalmist— as a personal call to leave everything and follow Him, to surrender our weaknesses in order to be filled with His strength.

Simon put out into deep waters even though, as a professional fisherman, he knew it would be foolhardy to expect to catch anything. In humbling himself before the Lord’s command, he was exalted—his nets filled to overflowing.

These readings that are proclaimed this Sunday before Ash Wednesday  are a perfect preparation for Lent. They challenge us to look at ourselves not in comparison to other imperfect people, but rather to look at ourselves in relationship to our good and holy God. When we do that we will realize that like Isaiah, Paul, and Peter, we are unworthy and sinful. Like them, we are in need of God’s mercy and grace.

We are in need of this coming season of Lent to turn from sin and to grow in holiness! 
 

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