Homily: March 8, 2025, Satruday after the Ash Wednesday (Call of Levi)
He said to him, "Follow me." And leaving everything behind, he got up and followed him.
Have you watched the TV series about Jesus, The Chosen? Which is your favorite character?
I personally love the character of Matthew. With poetic imagination, they beautifully presented this scene when Jesus called out to Matthew and how he responded spontaneously to the call.
I remember watching Jesus walk past Matthew’s tax collection booth, and they both locked eyes, just before Jesus called out to him. It was exciting to see the way Matthew looking shocked at first and then disregarding even the Roman guard’s attempts to stop him, Matthew just went out of his booth and left his high-paying job forever, without looking back.
It almost seems as if Matthew had been waiting, and waiting for someone to reach out to him, someone to invite him, call him and give him a good reason to change his life.
As a tax collector, Matthew was trapped between two worlds. His own Jewish people rejected him because he collected taxes for the Romans, considering him as the worst traitor. The Romans, who oppressed the Jews, merely saw him as an employee, someone useful to get the dirty job done for them but not a valued person.
Matthew may have had great possessions and privileges, but was there anyone who truly loved him? Did anyone treat him as a friend? Was he happy with his life?
In The Chosen, his family had even cut ties with him. That could be very real for tax collectors in those days.
Today, there are many people in similar situations - people who seem to have everything in life but still feel empty, lost and lonely. They have wealth, comfort, and success, but no real peace, no true joy, no one whom they can trust confidently, no one to open their hearts to. It is a painful, lonely life.
Matthew must have felt this way. But then Jesus called him - a simple, straightforward, unpretentious but profound invitation: “Follow me.”
He did not hesitate. He must have been waiting for such an invitation. It was a call that carries relief, freedom, life.
This is the same call Jesus makes to each of us. He does not promise the comforts of this world, but He offers something far greater - His peace. A peace which the world cannot give, which no one can take away.
Do you hear His gentle voice today? "Follow me."
Amen.
Comments
Post a Comment