Homily: June 20, 2022, Monday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time.

 “The king of Assyria took Samaria, and deported the children of Israel to Assyria”.

The northern kingdom, Israel, had been captured. Israel turned against God’s law, forgot all that He had done fore them and worshipped idols. That resulted, living in exile, homeless and with great suffering.

That was one of the darkest episodes in the history of Israel. The chosen people of God were scattered from the exile and never returned home to the promised land given to Abraham and his descendents. Only the southern kingdom, the tribe of Judah, returned after their exile to Babylon.

Why was God merciless? Why did He punish His people?

We understand God to be loving, compassionate and merciful. So, does God punish us when we do wrong? Does He turn a blind eye to our sorrows and sufferings?

The good news is God never punishes. We chose to punish ourselves, by choosing sin, choosing wrong, choosing evil.

Each cause has an effect, every sin has its consequence, its effect according to the gravity of the sin committed. The Israelites broke the first and most important of all the commandments, 

‘You shall have no other gods before Me’. They chose to reject God, detach from Him and so lost the graces that came with that relationship. The exiled life was its consequence.

Deuteronomy 30,15 says, “Today I give you a choice between good and evil, between life and death”. 

Every day we make many choices, sometimes it is not so clear, we may have to choose between good and the greater good, between evil and the lesser evil.

Whatever the choice, it results in a consequence, we bear the consequence. It either brings us closer to heaven, or nearer to hell. How do we ensure we make the right choice?

The sin of our first parents were not stealing or killing. It was a choice to be independent from God. That led to the first exile, a life detached from God.

So, the right way to choose, is always to choose God’s will. The good that we should choose is the good that God wants us to choose. To always be directed by God’s Word and God’s will. 

And whatever consequence that leads to, will be a consequence guided by God’s hands. And whatever we experience from that choice, will be a blessing in God’s ways. The basic rule is ‘choose life, choose love’. Amen.


Comments

Read

Homily: March 4, 2025, Tuesday of the Eight week in Ordinary time (Empty Handed)

Homily: March 2, 2022, Ash Wednesday

March 1, 2025: First Holy Communion Homily: St. Joseph's Catholic Church Seffner, Florida

Homily: July 15, 2024, Monay of the fifteenth week in Ordinary time (Pleasing God).

Homily: November, 13, 2023, Monday of the Thirty-second Week in Ordinary Time (hiding).

Homily: March 8, 2025, Satruday after the Ash Wednesday (Call of Levi)

Homily: August 28, 2023, Monday of the twenty first week in Ordinary time (Past sins- St. Augustine

Homily: February 14, 2023, Tuesday of the sixth week in Ordinary Time.

Homily: April 17, 2024 Wednesday of the Third Week of Easter (Jesus does not Reject)

Homily: June 5, 2023, Monday of the Ninth Week in Ordinary Time (Bury the dead).