VATICAN NEWS
By Jenny Kraska
As the Church marks the Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Jenny Kraska reflects on the theme, "Faith in a dumpster fire world".
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Jesus giving His Sermon on the Mount |
Lord’s Day
Reflection on the 20th Sunday in ordinary time Year C
1st
Reading Jeremiah (38:4-6, 8-10)
Ps 40:2, 3, 4, 18
2nd
Reading Hebrews (12:1-4)
Gospel according
to Luke (12:49-53)
At first hearing the Gospel reading, the words of Jesus can be
unsettling: “Do you think that I have come to establish peace on the earth? No,
I tell you, but rather division.” We know Jesus as the Prince of Peace, the One
who came to reconcile all things to the Father. Yet in this Gospel reading He
speaks of fire, division, and strife.
This apparent contradiction can leave us perplexed. But Christ
Himself was a sign of contradiction, as Simeon foretold when the infant Jesus
was presented in the Temple. His life and mission revealed the love and mercy
of God, yet that same truth and love confronted sin, hypocrisy, and injustice.
The Gospel comforts the afflicted but also afflicts the comfortable.
To follow Christ is to share in His mission, and that means we
too will sometimes become signs of contradiction. Our call to be saints and to
bear witness to the Gospel will not always be met with applause or agreement.
Truth, even when spoken with love, can stir resistance. Think of St. Thomas
More, who stood firm for the authority of the Church, knowing it would cost him
his life. Or St. Oscar Romero, whose defense of the poor and call for justice
provoked threats, division, and ultimately martyrdom. Holiness often comes with
a cost.
Division in this context is not about fostering hostility for
its own sake. Rather, it is the inevitable result when the light of Christ
shines into a world still marked by darkness. Some will receive that light with
joy; others will turn away. The Gospel challenges us to choose between comfort
and conversion, self-interest and sacrificial love, earthly peace and the peace
that only God can give.
This month, the world marks the 80th anniversary of the bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki – two events that brought the horrors of World War II
to a close yet left deep wounds in the human family. These anniversaries remind
us of the tension that Jesus describes. The human longing for peace is
universal, but history shows how far we often are from the peace Christ offers.
Nuclear weapons brought an end to fighting, but at a terrible cost to human
life and dignity. The division between God’s vision for humanity and the
choices we make in fear, pride, or revenge remains painfully real.
In remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we are called not simply
to lament the past but commit ourselves anew to the Gospel path of peace – a
peace rooted in truth, justice, and conversion of heart. This peace is not
naïve or fragile; it is forged in the fire of the Holy Spirit; the same fire
Jesus speaks of in this Gospel. It is peace that refuses to compromise with
evil, even when such refusal brings conflict or suffering.
May we embrace our calling as disciples to be, like Christ,
signs of contradiction – witnesses to a love that is stronger than death and a
peace the world cannot give.
Editor- This
article is got from the Vatican News with slight editing. By reading this
article, you are supporting the Media Apostolate in bringing the Pope’s words
into every home.
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