Pro-life
Preaching Hints
September 12 - Twenty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Ex 32:7-11, 13-14 1 Tm 1:12-17 Lk 15:1-32 or 15:1-10
The readings for this Sunday all proclaim the power and depth
of God’s mercy. The Gospel presents three analogies for the
merciful behavior of God the Father; the first reading shows an
example of that mercy toward an entire people; the second
reading shows an example of it toward an individual.
This is an opportunity to point out that the Gospel of Life
is a Gospel of Mercy. Mercy actually begins with God’s choice to
create us. We did not ask for or earn our lives, yet God decided
to be merciful and give us what we didn’t (and can never)
deserve. He mercifully rescued us from the nothingness in which
we once were, and brought us into being. Mercy always welcomes
life; the destruction of life is a direct contradiction of
mercy.
This weekend is an excellent opportunity to proclaim the
mercy of God even in the face of the ongoing abortion tragedy.
The Silent No More Awareness Campaign
(www.SilentNoMoreAwareness.org), a joint project of Priests for
Life and Anglicans for Life, is essentially a proclamation of
mercy. Women and men who have aborted their children find the
healing of Christ and then proclaim his mercy publicly – in
gatherings, in pulpits, in legislatures, in the media. Some of
the testimonies of these men and women can be read, heard, and
viewed on the website, and many of these individuals would be
available to share their testimony from the pulpit if invited to
give, for example, a brief sharing after Communion. Some may
even be available for this particular weekend. Simply inquire
with the campaign at the website.
Preaching on this theme also gives us the important
opportunity to warn against presumption, and to distinguish
mercy from permission. Neither God’s people of old, nor Paul,
nor the Prodigal Son were ever given permission to commit evil,
whether before or after they were forgiven. The proclamation of
the greatness of God’s mercy is meaningful only because the evil
of sin is great. Were sin trivial, then mercy would be
meaningless. Some will say, when faced with the temptation to
abort (or to commit any other sin), “Well, God is merciful –
he’ll understand.” What he understands is that sin destroys us,
and that grace can keep us from sin in the first place. The
promise of his mercy should never be hijacked and made into an
occasion of sin. Mercy follows upon repentance; it does not
replace it.
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