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Twenty-fifth
Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A
September 18, 2005
Catechist Background and Preparation
To prepare for this session, read all the readings.
Isaiah 55:6–9
Psalm 145:2–3, 8–9, 17–18
Philippians 1:20–24, 27
Matthew 20:1–16
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
Chapter 55 forms the conclusion of Deutero-Isaiah’s Book of Consolation
(cc. 40–55), written in the mid-sixth century as the Babylonian
Exile was coming to an end. The glory of God’s forgiveness, almost
beyond belief, calls for a response from the people in the form of a return
to covenant fidelity. God’s ways are unfathomable; his willingness
to redeem the people exceeds the prophet’s ability to grasp it.
What the prophet does know, however, is how urgent it is that sinners
forsake their wicked ways and turn to the Lord for mercy and forgiveness.
The lavish banquet described at the beginning of the chapter is set for
all who are willing to “come” (repeated three times in v.
1) and taste the Lord’s goodness.
Scripture scholars have noted that Jesus’ parables invariably involved
a shocking “twist” which challenged conventional wisdom and
invited the listener to re-think reality in an entirely new way. The reality
portrayed in the parables was what Jesus called “God’s reign,”
and it required of the listener a decision (i.e., a conversion) to be
part of that kind of world. (See the Catholic Doctrine section for the
Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time for a fuller description of the Church’s
teaching on the “kingdom of God.”) Jesus probably told today’s
parable for the benefit of his critics who objected to his offer of God’s
unconditional love and forgiveness to those openly recognized as sinners
(and, therefore, in their eyes unfit for God’s reign). That prostitutes
and tax collectors should receive forgiveness without earning it was as
absurd as paying all workers equal wages, regardless of how long or hard
they have (or have not) worked. The “logic” of the parable
is that everyone gets what they need to survive because of the owner’s
compassion, not because they have earned it. As an expression of the theology
which underlies the Church’s way of celebrating God’s forgiving
love, few parables can match today’s for capturing the essence of
the sacrament of penance.
Catholic Doctrine
The Sacrament of Penance
God loves us completely and unconditionally and from this abundance flows
the forgiveness of sins. It is in Jesus Christ that this divine love is
fully manifested. The life, ministry, suffering, death, and resurrection
of Jesus unlocks for us the font of new, risen, healed life as we are
incorporated into the mystery of Christ and his Church in baptism. Those
who fall into sin after baptism are not baptized again, but instead experience
the bountiful mercy and forgiveness of God in the sacrament of reconciliation.
The Catholic Church describes reconciliation in a number of ways. We call
it the sacrament of conversion because it celebrates change in the life
of the believer who turns back to God and away from sin (CCC 1423). We
call it the sacrament of confession because an essential element of this
ritual encounter is the disclosing of sins (CCC 1424). We also call it
the sacrament of penance because it celebrates one’s steps in substituting
healthy and holy actions in place of sin (CCC 1423 and 1459). We also
call it the sacrament of forgiveness because by it God’s loving
mercy is experienced (CCC 1422). Finally, we call it the sacrament of
reconciliation because it restores and reunites the sinner to God and
to the Church, relationships that had been severed or damaged by sin (CCC
1440 and 1445).
How is the rupturing effect of sin repaired in the celebration of reconciliation?
First of all, those who are moved by the Spirit to avail themselves of
the sacrament do so marked by a radical reorientation of the inner person.
In other words, prompted by God’s grace, true sorrow for one’s
sins encourages a person to an inner change of heart and conversion and
therefore leads the sinner to be reconciled (CCC 1431). Part of this inner
change may also be prompted by an examination of conscience assisted by
the Word of God found in scriptures or with the help of a spiritual director.
Then the believer approaches the sacrament. Catholics believe there are
four parts to the celebration of the sacrament. First, the love of God,
which has moved one to celebrate the sacrament, is then expressed by the
believer, along with sorrow and contrition for having sinned. In addition,
a firm resolution to avoid sin in the future is also expressed (CCC 1451).
Second, the sins themselves are admitted. This is always done privately
to a priest who presides over the celebration of this sacrament. The priest
cannot make use of or reveal under any circumstances these sins (CCC 1467).
This private and secret nature of confession is called “the sacramental
seal.” Third, the wrong that is done in sinning must be compensated
and therefore satisfaction offered. This is also known as penance (CCC
1459–60). While frequently this satisfaction is observed by prayer,
it can also extend to concrete activities of charitable works, service
of one’s neighbor, and voluntary self-sacrifice. Fourth, the priest
extends his hands over the head of the believer in blessing and prays
the absolution prayer. The absolution prayer expresses that it is God
alone who forgives and reconciles the sinner to himself and to the Church
(CCC 1441).
Reconciliation does not merely mean a detachment from sin. The healing
brought about in this sacramental encounter works a real change in the
person toward holiness and renewal as Christ himself places the lost sheep
on his shoulders and brings them back.
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