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2012

Archbishop Harris’ Gospel Reflection July 22 – Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

by Archbishop Joseph Harris
by Archbishop Joseph Harris

 Gospel Mk 6:30-34

The apostles gathered together with Jesus and reported all they had done and taught. He said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a deserted place and rest a while.” People were coming and going in great numbers, and they had no opportunity even to eat. So they went off in the boat by themselves to a deserted place. People saw them leaving and many came to know about it. They hastened there on foot from all the towns and arrived at the place before them. When he disembarked and saw the vast crowd, his heart was moved with pity for them, for they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things.

Homily

Quite recently I met a public figure who when I told him that I would take  a two week vacation in August, remarked that he had never taken a vacation in thirty years.  I thought of that as I read the Gospel for this weekend because this Gospel reading places us before what I consider to be a cultural aberration. It is a notion of time which is totally at odds with the biblical understanding. The notion of time which we espouse controls our way of being in this world. For us who live in the industrialized West, time is for production. Time is not to be wasted. The less time that we take to produce the more valued we are. People are heard to speak with admiration of the capacity for work of certain individuals.

In the face of this understanding of time and its purposes, we are presented in the Gospel reading with Jesus, who in a manner very similar to the creation story in which God rested after his work of creation, encourages his disciples to “Come away by yourselves to a deserted place and rest a while.”
In the face of the amount of people who wanted help of some sort, Jesus and his disciples go off to a lonely place by themselves. It appears also from the Gospel reading that they took their time about their journey because when they reached this lonely place, people on foot had already arrived at the place to which they the disciples were heading. The Gospel reading seems to be saying to us that Jesus encouraged his disciples to look after themselves and not let the volume of work so overwhelm them that they would have no time for themselves, for reflection, for restorative rest.

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The Gospel encourages us then to reflect on the way in which we use time for ourselves and for others. While it is necessary to produce, have we made production the be all and end all of our lives and the lives of those who work for us. Do we set goals for ourselves which effectively limit our ability to develop the important relationships in our lives, the relationship with God, with ourselves and with those who are dearest and closest to us? Do our children complain that they do not know us; do our spouses complain that we have no quality time for them; do our friends complain that they never see us?

These days we have the example of Pope Benedict who has gone off “to Castel Gondolfo to rest a while.”  From what we know of him we know that he will spend time enjoying his favourite pastime.  As we reflect on this gospel reading may God’s wisdom be ours so that we use time in ways which will help us to become more caring people, and the world a better place.

Prayer

All powerful and ever-loving God, we thank you for showing us that time has a spiritual purpose, that it is not simply about producing but that it is also about building our relationships in a manner that is worthy of people of the Kingdom. Give us your Spirit, fill us with your wisdom so that our notion of time will help us to relate to You, our Father as true sons and daughters, caring for each other and this beautiful and bounteous world that you have given to us. We ask this through the intercession of Mary our Mother and your Son Jesus. Amen

 

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