27th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 2017

27th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 2017

27A.   Isaiah 25:6-10a.  One can only imagine that Isaiah actually sung this to the people.  The vineyard is the people of Jerusalem and Judah.  Yahweh had prepared the people to be a holy people.  As if they were a vineyard, he had given them the Law, the Temple, the prophets; appointed the priests to produce a harvest of holiness.  Instead of growing into a holy people, they were like a yield of wild grapes, a people unfaithful to the Lord.  Rejected by his people, Yahweh made his vineyard into a ruin and allowed first the Assyrians and then Babylonians to trample and destroy the kingdom, first of Israel and then of Judah.  All that was left was bloodshed and the outcry of despair.

Matthew 21:33-43.  Jesus draws upon the images given in Isaiah’s sung parable to pronounce at the beginning of Holy Week a second parable (the first was last week’s gospel) to the chief priests and the elders of the people.  The landowner, again as the image of God, prepared a vineyard, a setting for his people to become a holy people.  However, now Jesus presents the tenants, those in charge of overseeing the care of the vineyard, as the villains.  Yahweh sent his servants, the prophets to obtain to obtain his produce, the holiness, or righteousness of the people but the tenants, the chief priests and the elders, rejected God’s servants, the prophets.  Finally, God sends his Son, Jesus himself, but at the end of Holy Week they kill him hoping to secure for themselves sole possession of God’s people and land, the vineyard.  Jesus says to the chief priests and elders, the tenants of the parable, “Therefore, I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people that will produce its fruit.”  Jesus quotes the Scripture that the builders, once again referring to the chief priests and elders, rejected the cornerstone, Jesus, sent by the Father.  They tried to become the cornerstone themselves; but instead, they lost their position as the builders of God’s kingdom to others.

Philippians 4:6-9.  What is this yield, this produce that the owners look to receive at harvest time that is the holiness or righteousness of his people?  This epistle from Paul is the answer to that question.  People who live totally dependent upon God “have no anxiety at all” because they live in God’s strength and not their own weakness.  Secure in God’s strength there is no reason for worry.  One way or another he will supply for all.  “Then the peace of God that surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”

Through prayer, God maintains lines of contact with his faithful.  Prayer is both listening and speaking.  Peaceful discernment of God’s Will is the essential heart of prayer.  What God has to say is infinitely more important than what we have to say.  Two helps that Paul gives us are: whatever is honorable, just, pure, lovely, gracious are signs of God’s Will as is, secondly, whatever can be learned from all in life of St. Paul as from the lives of all the saints.  When we live in God’s Will, “Then the God of peace will be with you.”