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Twenty-fourth
Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A
September 11, 2005
Catechist Background and Preparation
To prepare for this session, read all the readings.
Sirach 27:30–28:7
Psalm 103:1–2, 3–4, 9–10, 11–12
Romans 14:7–9
Matthew 18:21–35
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 Book of Sirach is part of the wisdom literature, a corpus of writings
dedicated to showing how the wise person can live in harmony with God’s
plan for the world and thus fulfill the prescriptions of the Law. The
author is a sage, well traveled and well versed in the many cultures and
philosophies of his day, which might seem quite attractive to his Jewish
countrymen. He writes his own book of reflections on the Torah, on the
wisdom of the nations, and on God’s ways in the world, in order
to convince his countrymen of the superiority of relying on the wisdom
of Yahweh over any other source of guidance. Sirach was first written
in Hebrew at the start of the second century before Christ, but the work
as we know it was translated into Greek some years later following the
Maccabean revolt. The translation reflects the concern of pious Judaism
to counter the attractions of Hellenistic culture. Sirach was not accepted
into the Jewish canon of scripture, but the Essene community was familiar
with and followed many of its teachings. Protestantism considers it an
apocryphal work, but Catholics regard it among the deuterocanonical, inspired
books of sacred scripture. Today’s selection is a remarkable anticipation
of the sixth petition of the Lord’s Prayer. It is an interesting
speculation whether Jesus was influenced by this text in his formulation
of the distinctive prayer he taught his disciples (cf. Matthew 6:9–15).
Sirach bases his teaching on Israel’s experience of God’s
unmerited and limitless forgiveness. Psalm 103 is an extended meditation
on the qualities of the deity, particularly the merciful face of God that
Israel had come to know so well through its history of sin and forgiveness.
(“The Lord is kind and merciful; slow to anger, and rich in compassion.”)
Matthew’s discourse on the Church concludes with today’s pericope,
in which Jesus shows the extent to which community members must be willing
to share with others the limitless gift of forgiveness that they themselves
have received at God’s hands. Peter’s question evokes a response
from Jesus that turns the blood vengeance of Genesis 4:24 (“If Cain
is avenged sevenfold, then Lamech seventy-sevenfold”) on its head.
The parable illustrating this teaching is deliberately fantastic from
start to finish: the amount owed by the royal official is astronomically
high; the sum he demands from his debtor is absurdly little. Parables
typically had but a single point, and the teaching here seems to be about
total forgiveness of a debt that is impossible to repay. That, at least,
is where our own experience of sinfulness intersects with divine mercy.
Like Sirach before him, Matthew wants his reader to understand the connection
between God’s actions on our behalf and the moral imperative we
are under to act likewise toward others. The stern warning at the conclusion
seems to be Matthew’s addition to underline for his community the
urgency of heeding the Lord’s teaching on forgiveness.
Catholic Doctrine
Forgiveness
As creatures that are limited and have faults, we confess our sinfulness
to God and to one another. And yet, baptized into the mystery of Christ
and formed anew as members of the kingdom, we also confess the limitless
mercy and love of God. In Jesus, we believers have experienced this mercy
and forgiveness of the Most High. It is also in Jesus that we are commanded
to forgive one another inasmuch as God has forgiven us.
This Sunday’s gospel passage is the crowning summary of Jesus’
teaching to his Church and, as such, reflects a strong theme in his life
and his ministry—forgiveness of others. This theme is also taken
up in the way in which Jesus taught his disciples to pray and during his
final moments upon the cross when he spoke words of forgiveness to those
who tortured and killed him.
Catholics are called to emulate the example given to us in Christ. We
know therefore that the mercy of God that is poured out for us in Jesus’
saving life, ministry, and sacrifice will never penetrate into the depths
of our hearts as long as our attitude toward those who have wronged us
remains frozen in hatred and ill will (CCC 2840). Indeed, deliberately
hating others and wishing them great harm is considered by the Church
as a grave or mortal sin that fractures our relationship with God (CCC
2303). The Church recognizes that forgiving those who have wronged us
is a daunting task, given our human nature, but it is a task that has
been enjoined upon us by Jesus. The Lord is unequivocal, saying, “But
I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,
that you may be children of your heavenly Father…” (Matthew
5:44).
The Master not only taught his disciples to forgive and love their enemies,
he also lived his own teaching perfectly. When he hung dying upon the
cross, his thoughts went beyond his own pain (and what would have been
justifiable anger) to pray for his torturers. Jesus interceded for them,
saying, “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do”
(Luke 23:34).
The Church teaches that forgiveness of one’s enemies is the culmination
of the disciple’s prayer, for in extending mercy to those who have
wronged us we are transformed—brought closer to Christ and configured
to the Master who showed us the way. This path of reconciliation proves
that love is stronger than sin and conquers the worst this world offers
(CCC 2844). Forgiveness of enemies and those who have hurt us is not only
something upheld in the words and deeds of Jesus but is embedded by the
Lord in the prayer that he has given us disciples, a prayer text that
perfectly expresses the Good News of God in Jesus (CCC 2763). Thus, by
truly praying this prayer every day and meditating upon its stanzas, disciples
of Jesus are formed from the inside out as their hearts are attuned to
the words of the Master who plants within them compassion, gratitude,
and love. In the Lord’s Prayer we ask the Father to “forgive
us our debts, as we forgive our debtors…” (Matthew 6:12).
The two parts of this verse turn upon that tiny word “as.”
As expressed in this prayer, it is not possible to keep Jesus’ commandment
to “love one another as I have loved you” (John 13:34, Matthew
5:48, and Luke 6:36) without internalizing the merciful love of God and
then offering that same gift to others, including our enemies (CCC 2842).
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