3rd Sunday ( C) 26 January 2025 Australia Day
The people were all in tears as they listened to the words of the Law (first reading Neh 8,9).
They were tears of joy because they were realising through the words the love that God had for them.
And there was shame in those tears too as they realized how poorly they had responded to that love.
Then we go to the Gospel, where the response to the word of God is very different. Through a combination of pride, stubbornness, jealousy, hard-heartedness – the people of Jesus’ own town would not accept Him – mainly because He was from that town!
If they had listened carefully to the words and not pre-judged, they might have responded as the people in Nehemiah’s time.
Now we come to our time, our day. It is Australia Day and we are again called upon to respond. Do we believe these words that we hear in the Bible, and in the teachings of the Church? And if we believe them, do we then live them out in our lives.
First, the gratitude: what has God not done for us? In creating us, sparing us punishment, becoming one with us, enduring insults, dying for us, extending His time among us through the sacraments, offering us endless mercy.
Is that a good day’s work that deserves some gratitude?
Then we find Australia is richly blessed in peace, space and sunshine, physical beauty, food and wine, sport, blending of many cultures in one place, and many more.
Should we be grateful for these things? And then all the blessings that come from being human, and thus loved by God.
After gratitude we acknowledge our sins and ask for the pardon that will always be there.
Australians are mostly tolerant and will not try to throw Jesus off a cliff (Lk 4,29). We are rightly horrified at any violence of that sort.
But we might, as Australians, use that tolerance to avoid making any definite commitment ourselves – to treat all religions as the same, and therefore nothing to get excited about.
God does not agree with that policy, however. He reminds all nations very strongly that there is one God and only one, and He is it!
For those who do believe, our job is to make Australia look more like the kingdom of Heaven, where all is perfect.
For example, in business, instead of trying to exploit the other person, rather ‘ought you not let yourselves be cheated?’ (1 Co 6,7-8). And that is very much in the ‘jubilee’ idea.
We are supposed to be like Israel was on its better days, under God’s laws and making progress. It worked for Israel when they obeyed, but still they did not remember.
Many people acknowledge God and the Church for generosity to the poor and needy.
However, there is another layer. We do not just hand out food and supplies, we hand out the gospel as well and this is where it can get tense.
Sometimes we agree with the surrounding culture (eg fighting bushfires, making the streets safe, justice for everyone).
Sometimes we disagree, like on life issues: (eg abortion, euthanasia, marriage).
We call freely on God’s mercy to hold us over till we can get it right. Thus we ask mercy for Australia for any false beliefs or wrong turnings. We ask for mercy and we learn from it.
There is one more thing we must do and this is often missed. We must worship God, sing His praises. God is to be loved, not feared.
May we get all this right. We pray for a better tomorrow for Australia, and every nation.
Till His kingdom come!
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