Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time
There
is a new language developing right in our very midst. I’m not a philologist, but I’m sure those who study
languages are having a field day with this new language. I wouldn’t say that I speak this
language fluently, but I am conversational in it, though, to be honest, it’s
not a spoken language, but only a written one. I don’t know if there’s a name for it, but I’m going to call
it English Text Language.
There
are obviously some benefits to this system if you’re texting or tweeting. But it strikes me that the response n-p
can have s a negative effect on our appreciation for a person or an act for
which we should be grateful. Rather
than acknowledging the person or the thing that was done, it’s written off,
minimized, because it was no problem.
The person who is being thanked is basically saying, though perhaps not
with this intention, there’s no reason to thank me, because what I did wasn’t
that much or wasn’t that important.
And this message, over time, can erode a culture of gratitude that is so
important, and about which our first reading and Gospel speak today.
In
the first reading, Naaman wants to thank Elisha because Naaman had been a
leper, but had followed the advice of Elisha and washed in the Jordan, and was
cured. Now, at first, maybe it
seems like Elisha just tells Naaman, n-p, because he will not accept Naaman’s
gift. But what is really happening
is that Elisha is refusing to take credit, because it was God who healed
Naaman, not Elisha. And Naaman,
after some arguing back and forth, gets the point, because he ends up taking
dirt so he can worship the true God, rather than his pagan gods. Naaman wants to give thanks to God by
offering a sacrifice.
In
the Gospel, it can be very easy to moralize this story of the ten lepers. How many times have parents used it to
teach children to say thank you?
And that certainly is part of the message. But we shouldn’t want to say thank you simply because
there’s a rule. Whenever we
receive a gift, thanksgiving should exude from us quite naturally. Yes, Jesus wondered why the other nine
lepers did not return to give thanks (though it should be noted that He never
told them to return). But he does
wonder, that is, He is impressed, that thanksgiving is the natural response of
the leper, a Samaritan, back to Jesus.
And this Samaritan has some faith that Jesus is God, as Jesus says,
“‘your faith has saved you.’”
Jesus accepts what Elisha cannot, because Jesus is the same God who
healed Naaman centuries before.
How
often are we thankful, and how often do we give God thanks for the many
blessings He has given us? We are
meant to give thanks each time we come to Mass, because even the work Eucharist
comes from Greek which mean “to give thanks well.” We offer thanks to God the Father through Jesus the Son in
the power of the Holy Spirit first and foremost for the gift of new life that
was made possible by the death and resurrection of Jesus. But we should also give thanks to God
for all the other great gifts He has given us: life; our talents; love; perhaps
financial stability; perhaps a good education; friends; faith; the list can go
on and on. I want to challenge you
to spend 3 minutes before each Mass thanking God. I know that a lot of us talk to our friends when we’re here
in the nave of the church.
Catching up with friends is a great thing, but spend 3 minutes before
Mass here in the pews thanking your best friend, God, who has given you the
other friends to whom you can speak.
Talk with your other friends earlier before Mass or after Mass in the
vestibule, so that everyone can take time in silence to thank God for the many
blessings.
And,
the next time you do something kind for someone, and they say “thank you”
(because they were taught good manners), don’t say, “no problem,” or text n-p,
but say you’re welcome, and accept the gratitude that the other person is
sharing with you, no matter how big or how small you think the gift or favor
was. In this way we’ll build up a
culture of gratitude, which will certainly make the world a better and holier
place. T-t-y-l.