Gospel Reflections by Father Gerry Pierse, C.Ss.R.

C - 30th Sunday in Ord. Time

October 24, 2004
Sir 35:12-14, 16-18 • 2 Tim 4:6-8, 16-18 • Lk 18:9-14

The Pharisee and the Publican

One way of assessing where one is on one’s life journey is to ask oneself what is the scripture story that I find most meaningful at the present moment. It is better not to think about this but just to create a space and very quickly a story or phrase or incident will come to consciousness. Some of the most common stories that emerge are the Prodigal Son, the Lilies of the Fields, the Annunciation. When the person reflects on what the story is saying they will find it interpreting what is currently going on in their own lives. For example, the Prodigal Son story may link in to an issue of forgiving another or of being jealous of a sibling. The Annunciation, or the Lilies of the Fields, may bring up fears of some decision or situation that persons find themselves in. For 17 wonderfully enriching but totally frustrating years, I have been trying to say the prayer word for at least 20 minutes twice a day. Out of that experience, the stories that float to my consciousness are the temple stories, the pharisee and the tax collector (Luke 18:9-14), and the widow’s mite (Luke 21:1-4).

Jesus addresses the first story to some persons fully convinced of their own righteousness who looked down on others. “Two men went up to the temple to pray,” he says, “one was a pharisee and the other a tax collector. The pharisee stood by himself and said: ‘thank you, God, that I am not like other people, grasping, crooked, adulterous, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give the tenth of all my income to the Temple.’ In the meantime the tax collector, standing far off, would not even lift his eyes to heaven, but beat his breasts saying: ‘O God, be merciful to me, a sinner.’ I tell you when this man went down to his house, he was reconciled with God, but not the other. For whoever makes himself out to be great will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be great.”

I think that where this story hits me is that I, and probably most people, like to have a success story to report to God when I go to pray. Just as we like to tell others that we are doing well and that we have many accomplishments, we think that God is expecting the same from us in our prayer. We live in a world where one has to present one’s curriculum vitae and where one tries to make it look as impressive as possible. One tries to be better than the rest of people. This is precisely what the Pharisee did, “he prayed to himself.” God does not need to be impressed, but knows who we are already. What impresses God is not what we show ourselves to be, but the extent to which we know ourselves as we really are. God can align with us when we are aware of our own reality: “O God, be merciful to me a sinner.” But God cannot align with us when we are pretending to be where we really are not. In practice this means that when I meditate I have an instinctive need to be successful so that I can impress God, but what he wants is only a humble acceptance of where I really am at this time.

If the first big mistake of the Pharisee was to think that God would be impressed by his boasting, the second was in his thinking that he was better than others: “I thank you, God, that I am not grasping, unjust, adulterous like the rest of people, and particularly that I am not like this tax collector here.” Madness has been defined as having a sickness different than everybody else. Sanity is awareness of our common sickness. Our common sickness is the fear and insecurity that makes us grasping, controlling and condemnatory of others. Most of us have a neurotic compulsion which leads us to believe that when we put others down we will look better ourselves. To have to proclaim that we are better than others betrays the inner fear that we are not. But trying to put others down, to elevate ourselves, is a self-destroying waste of energy. It is like the nervous swimmer who exerts enormous energy to keep head and shoulders above water. Confident swimmers will allow themselves to go under and allow just enough of themselves to appear above water so as to be able to breathe.

I need the story about the pharisee and the publican to sustain me in meditation. There is the instinctive need in me to want to be able to give an impressive account of myself as he did, and to be able to feel that I am better than others.

When I started out I hoped that in a short time I would be able to meditate without distractions for 100% of the allotted time. But most of the time I find myself realizing at the end of the period that I was distracted for 99% of the time. Every body else must certainly have been better than me! But this does not matter at all to God. The thing is to patiently and humbly offer all that I have to give, the 1%. And the Lord in his love accepts that humble 1% which is my 100%. Knowing my incapacity to be successful without claiming credit for myself, God allows me to give 100% in a way that that will not make me conceited or proud.

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Taken from Sundays into Silence - A Pathway to Life. Copyright © 1998 by Claretian Publications

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Sundays into Silence

A Pathway to Life

by Gerry Pierse, cssr
380 pp., PhP 299, U$ 19.95

“The best word I can find to describe this book is integration. In these reflections on the gospel readings for year A, B, and C of the liturgical cycle, Fr. Pierse integrates the richness of the word of God with experiences and stories from life in the community. He shows how through silence, the word can bear fruit in service and sacrament.” (R. J. Cardinal Vidal)

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