Homily: September 3, 2023, Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time (God forbid)

 Then Peter took Jesus aside and began to rebuke Him, saying, "God forbid, Lord! May such a thing never happen to you."

If we hear of someone predicting a terrible thing happening to them, or simply imagining a bad situation for themselves, we will say the same. It is natural. We would not wish anything bad to happen to anyone we love and treasure.

Peter loved Jesus very much, and he was still expecting Jesus to overthrow the Romans and rebuild Jerusalem. Naturally and logically, he would not want anything bad to happen to his beloved master. He probably had in his mind to do all that he could to prevent Jesus from being killed, he was ready to fight the enemies surely.

But Jesus' response was shocking. He called Peter, our first pope, ‘Satan’. That was a harsh one. Just before this, He had entrusted the keys of the kingdom to Peter, and now He considered him an opposition.

What was happening?

God’s ways are not based on our logic or rationale. God’s plans may not make sense to us at first. But Jesus will never compromise obedience to God’s will. Nothing or no one could deviate Him from that mission. And whoever stopped or prevented Him from fulfilling His Father’s will, is a satan.

This incident tells us a lot about our Christian discipleship. As Jesus says, "Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me."

Our Christian call is to take up our crosses daily and follow the Lord in fulfilling God’s will, even if it seems illogical or irrational. It is total trust in God’s plan and complete surrender to His will, without question, without negotiation, without trying to bend God’s way to our way.

Most of us wish for a comfortable, peaceful life. We would not choose struggles, difficulties and crosses for ourselves. But an authentic and active Christian life requires us to step out of our comfort zone to serve others.

If we are faithful to our Christian vocation, the world will hate us. We will be criticized, laughed at, mocked, and persecuted because a true follower of Jesus cannot please the world.

Our crosses usually come from our vocation – be it consecrated life, married life or single. Within our vocation, there lie our crosses to be carried in faith every day, trusting that this way chosen for us will lead us to holiness. But like our Lord Jesus, the resurrection comes after the passion and death. If we reject it, we would be opposing God’s plan.

In today's first reading, we see that Prophet Jeremiah also suffered much for his mission. He was persecuted by his own people, especially by the leaders of Israel. He cried out to God and lamented, yet ultimately, Jeremiah obeyed God’s call and fulfilled God’s will.

May God forbid any bad thing to ever happen to us, but as God wills, not me. May everything that happen to us, only lead us closer to heaven, alongside Jesus and the saints. May we be graced to embrace the will of God. Amen.


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