Judge Sits Highest

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 150 – Sunday, October 27, 2019

A few years ago I was on a jury, a jury trial, that lasted ten days.  I learned a lot.  What was really interesting is the layout of the courtroom.  In the courtroom at the highest level you had the judge – sitting very high.  Next to the judge was the witness box on one side; the jurors on the other side, sitting up, and then the alternate jurors a step down.  And then there was the main floor which was everybody else.  So it was really based on judgment.  The judge being the highest judge was the highest.  The jurors being the next judges were the second highest.  The plaintiffs and defendants in the witness box, the third highest.  Then everybody else.  A very vertical structure, based on judgment.  This is exactly what Jesus is getting at in this example of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector, oftentimes called the Pharisee and the Publican.  There’s a lot of judgment going on here.  That’s why the Pharisee is being condemned because he places himself so high – above the Publican, above all other men, all other people.  Jesus calls us to be brothers and sisters.  Jesus calls us to live a horizontal life.  To gather with him around the table.  To gather with him as his companions, as his disciples, as his apostles.  To gather with him horizontally.  Whenever we put ourselves vertically – hmmm, I think we’re distant from how he calls us to live, how he calls us to be, how he calls, how he calls us his brothers and sisters. 

But We Do Have Feelings

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 477 – Friday, October 25, 2019

There’s a line from Saint Therese of Lisieux.  She writes, “In Carmel, we do not have enemies, but we do have feelings.”  In today’s Gospel, Jesus is talking about opponents, magistrates and trials.  I think the call is: let’s never get there.  Let’s have feelings positive, in regard, patience for one another.  Let’s not have enemies.  In Carmel, we do not have enemies, but we do have feelings.  Let’s hope they’re positive. 

No Greatness Without Love

Carmelite homily for Lectionary 470 – Thursday, October 17, 2019

It seems that all the Carmelite writers have the same quotation – maybe they’re quoting each other, but it’s a good one.  “The Lord will never look at the greatness of your deeds; only upon the love with which they are done.”  In today’s Gospel we have Jesus condemning the people because they’re defending the faith, and going after him and each other, and building great monuments.  They’re doing all sorts of things that are laudatory, but no love in them.  I think this quotation from John of the Cross, from Teresa of Avila, from Therese of Lisieux, from ‘you name that Carmelite author’, it’s there: “The Lord will never look at the greatness of your deeds; only upon the love with which they are done.”  Whatever you do today, no matter how great, do it with love.