Twenty-third    Sunday in Ordinary Time / Msgr. Owen F. Campion 
			The Sunday Readings
			
	      
The Book of Wisdom provides this weekend’s Mass with its first reading.
Scholars believe that this book was written in Alexandria by a Jew who  had emigrated from the Holy Land, or whose forebears had come from the Holy  Land.  It was originally composed in  Greek. Since it was written outside the Holy Land and not in Hebrew, orthodox  Jews have never accepted it as genuine Scripture.  Following this reasoning, Anglican scholars  in the early seventeenth century excluded it from the King James Version of the  Bible.
But in ancient Christian tradition, it was revered as inspired by the  Holy Spirit. Therefore, Catholic editions of the Scriptures include it.
This book, along with so much of the Old Testament’s wisdom literature,  builds on the basic notion of the unshaken Jewish belief in the one true God of  Moses and the law of Moses reflects the deepest and best human logic, or wisdom.
Specifically, this reading simply says that much of life cannot be  predicted beforehand, nor can it be understood. Humans are limited. God is  all-wise. The wonder is that God has shared with us, speaking to us through  representatives, such as Moses and the prophets.
For its second reading, the Church chooses a passage from St. Paul’s  Epistle to Philemon. Only rarely is this epistle the source of a reading in the  liturgy, possibly because Philemon is the shortest volume in the New Testament,  with only 25 verses in one chapter.
The story is dramatic. Paul wrote to Philemon, whose slave, Onesimus,  escaped from Philemon’s custody to be with Paul.
To run away from slavery was a serious crime in Roman law at the time,  as it once was in the United States.
In this letter, Paul announced that he was sending Onesimus back to  Philemon, but Paul counseled Philemon to receive this runaway slave as a  brother in Christ.
Several lessons strongly appear. The first is that all humans are  equal in dignity, having been created by God and redeemed by Christ.
Secondly, disciples must love all others, including those difficult to  love, even those who have done wrong.
St. Luke’s Gospel supplies the last reading.
The Gospel already has made clear that true discipleship builds upon a  deeply personal wish to follow the Lord. It is a decision not always easy  sustained.
Enabling a disciple to continue in this resolution and to abide by it  in every circumstance of life requires not just determination but God’s  strength and insight.
The Gospel bluntly says that many obstacles may stand between a  disciple’s initial intention to follow Christ and actually living as a  disciple.
It is important to remember that the Gospel of Luke was written when  Christianity, albeit an infant religion in the Roman Empire, was sailing into  the hot, strong winds of cultural opposition to Gospel values and even into  persecution under the law.
A fact, resulting from this situation, was that Christians had to face  pressure from their loved ones to forsake the Gospel. Thus, the Evangelist here  recalls that Jesus said a true disciple should turn away even from father, mother,  brother or sister, if these close relatives urged abandoning Christ. The disciple’s  top priority was his or her choice to be one with Christ.          
          
Reflection
                      The Gospel sets the stage. Living the Christian life is not easy. Christians  must withstand much if they truly are committed to the Lord.
            Among many pressures is the pressure not to see God in others, to deny  others their due. Only in standing firm against such pressures can a disciple  expect to stay the course. Disciples must on occasion even re-think  presuppositions, change opinions and even defy prevailing conventions.
            It may be hard, but if undertaken for Christ, God will provide the  needed strength to persevere. †