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Twenty-third
Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A
September 4, 2005
Catechist Background and Preparation
To prepare for this session, read all the readings.
Ezekiel 33:7–9
Psalm 95:1–2, 6–7, 8–9
Romans 13:8–10
Matthew 18:15–20
Spend a few minutes reflecting on what these readings mean for you today.
Is there a particular reading that appeals to you? Is there a word or
image that engages you?
Read the following Word in Liturgy and Catholic Doctrine
sections. Read the Word in Liturgy and Catholic Doctrine sections. These
give you background on what you will be doing this session. Read over
the session outline and make it your own. Check to see what materials
you will need.
The Word In Liturgy
The prophet Ezekiel was active at the time of the Babylonian captivity.
Scholars date this oracle to the period after he had been exiled to Babylon
but before the final destruction of Jerusalem. The preaching of Ezekiel
underwent a perceptible evolution as he grappled with the refusal of the
nation to repent of its infidelities and its pending destruction. His
focus increasingly was on individual responsibility—his own responsibility
as a “watchman” charged with announcing the disaster he foresaw,
as well as the responsibility to repent which belonged to every individual
who heard his words of warning. His thought shows a clear development
over earlier notions of corporate responsibility which consistently overlooked
the individual’s status before God in favor of the fate of the nation
as a whole. Ezekiel’s appeal was to the conversion of the individual.
Behind such an appeal was the conviction that God would respond favorably
to all who did indeed return to him in faithfulness to the covenant.
In chapter 18 of Matthew we have Jesus’ discourse on the Church.
This discourse follows a longer narrative section (cc. 14–17) on
discipleship. It is easy to see in today’s pericope traces of the
struggle of Matthew’s community (and of every subsequent Christian
community) to live out in harmony the Lord’s command of mutual love.
The focus of Matthew’s concern here is how best to deal with the
frictions of communal living, where members inevitably offend and sin
against one another. Jesus’ words reflect the pastoral approach
recommended by Matthew. They also indicate the conviction that conversion
of heart was indeed a possibility in such circumstances and should be
actively sought by the members of the community. Perhaps Matthew had in
mind the community’s prayer for the conversion of recalcitrant members
when he added at this point Jesus’ encouraging reminder that the
Father would answer the prayer of those gathered in his name. Conversion
of heart, as the early Christians knew well, is ultimately a gift of God’s
grace.
Catholic Doctrine
Conversion
The injunction to “repent” or “be converted” is
the first preaching that issues forth from Jesus as he begins his public
ministry and is an essential characteristic of the proclamation of the
kingdom of God (CCC 1427). It is the underlying theme for all the subsequent
teaching of Jesus and indeed all his healing miracles and ministerial
activity that brought him to the cross and resurrection. Conversion is
a constant theme in the life journey of all who follow Christ and thus
who seek to put into practice the way, the truth, and the life of the
kingdom which he proclaimed.
The New Testament uses two terms to speak about conversion: metanoia and
epistrophe. The former indicates the internal mechanisms of thinking and
willing which occasion the conversion, while the later term carries with
it the sense of the outward, visible characteristics of change (NDictTheol
233). Nevertheless, both terms signal a turning around of the person who
no longer pursues old ways, but has embraced a return to our true home
in the holy and the divine.
Two classic stories of this Christian conversion or of turning around
are found in the lives of St. Paul and St. Augustine (d. 430). Both the
scriptural account of the conversion of Saul of Tarsus (who became Paul
the Apostle) in the Acts of the Apostles and the account found in St.
Augustine’s autobiography, The Confessions, point to a typical pattern
of conversion. This pattern can be described as (1) a perceived tension
or disorientation in one’s life, (2) a synthesis, learning, or insight
gathered from the elements of one’s past life, (3) an experience
of mercy or forgiveness for failures, and (4) the gracious invitation
and call from the Holy One, God, to a new, better life. The great drama
involved in St. Paul’s and St. Augustine’s conversions may
not be experienced by others, and yet the pattern may well be valid for
many. There is a radical reorientation of one’s whole self toward
a gracious God that takes place gradually over time and eventually involves
every facet of one’s personality.
Besides being lifelong, the radical reorientation that describes conversion
in Christ is characterized by several other important features. First,
Catholics understand that conversion has an ecclesial dimension. While
faith in God is a personal act, it is not an isolated act of the individual.
No one comes to belief in the love of God in isolation, just as no one
lives life alone. We Catholics understand that faith is received and handed
on through human beings, in the Church (CCC 166). In addition, the entire
body of the Church is called to conversion, for while it is holy it embraces
sinners and thus is always in need of purification. (It is no accident
that the third stage of adult Christian initiation is called “purification
and enlightenment.”) Second, Catholics understand that conversion
does not remain a purely internal facet of one’s being. For when
one’s whole self is converted to Christ, external actions necessarily
issue forth. A true interior change of heart is manifested through visible
signs, gestures, and works (CCC 1430). Third, Catholics understand that
the way in which human beings grow and mature—along with the fact
of sin, which is still present in this world—means that those who
have begun the conversion journey may falter. Nevertheless, God gives
us the grace and the ability to begin anew and take heart in divine love
(CCC 1432). Fourth, Catholics understand that the seven sacraments are
not only signs of the believer’s growth and maturity in the Lord,
but that they are, in effect, living symbols by which Christ acts within
us to conform us more closely as adopted sons and daughters of the living
God. In the sacraments, divine love heals us, transforms us (CCC 1129),
and propels us further along the path of conversion.
Ultimately, Christian conversion means that the believer has embraced
a living person, Jesus Christ. In other words, the change that occurs
is not mere acceptance of Church teaching or fascination with the beauty
of Catholic ritual, culture, or art. These things may certainly lead one
to embrace the Lord, but in the final analysis the change brought about
by Christian conversion is born of one’s devotion toward, love of,
and challenge found in the person of the Messiah, the one who suffered,
died, and rose for each one of us.
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