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14th Sunday of Ordinary Time
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In the first reading, Isaiah tells us in
graphic language what Jerusalem meant to the Jews. It was the center of
worship, the center of their lives. He gives us comforting words about
the city. He compares her to a nursing mother and says prosperity will
spread over her like a river. When Isaiah is writing all this, he is
looking at a city in ruins. The Babylonians had destroyed it. Isaiah had
warned the people, but they did not listen to him. They rejected him;
Isaiah could have said, “I told you so.” No, he does not let rejection
or disaster overcome him.
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He looks forward to a bright future. I do
not think anyone responds to rejection very well. Be it a ten-year old
boy who gets a crush or the pretty girl who sits in front of him only to
be ignored. Or the college graduate who keeps being turned down for a
job? “We are looking for someone with more experience,” the personnel
manager says. However, a fifty-year old person with plenty of experience
applies for a job and is turned down. “We are looking for someone
younger,” he is told. Rejection, we all have faced it.
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Do you remember the sting, the anger, the
embarrassment not being chosen for the team? Or perhaps, feeling the
temptation to quit? Just before our gospel today, Jesus had asked three
people to follow him in discipleship. Just as He called Peter and the
other apostles; but each rejected Him. They each had polite excuses,
three out of three rejections for Jesus. Can you imagine anyone turning
Jesus down? How it must have stung? How did Jesus respond? We read now
in the gospel.
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First, He did not give up. He redoubled His
efforts to reach out to the world and He sent out seventy-two disciples.
The temptation when one is rejected; is to focus on the rejection and
overlook the many moments of acceptance. Jesus did not allow what He had
lost to erase His view of what He still had. A married couple told me
of an experience they had. After the death of their twelve-year old
daughter, they were paralyzed by the loss. Months after her death, the
husband and wife were seated at the kitchen table and the husband could
only stare at the empty chair at the table where his daughter used to
sit. He became overwhelmed with loss.
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Finally, the silence was broken by the
sobbing voice of their son, “I’m still here, remember me? I’m still
here.” The man said that was the moment when his grief began to turn. He
has lost much, but he also still had much. From that moment on both he
and his wife tried to focus on the chairs that were filled. Jesus was
never naïve. He knew that all of us at some time would experience
rejection. And He tells us how to deal with it; wipe the dust of
rejection off your feet and brush it off. Too often we drag the
accumulated residue of our rejections, loss and defeats. Like ones
overstuffed suitcase; lighten up and drop the excess baggage of old
losses and old failures.
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Do not let the scar tissue of these wounds
harden your spirit and prevent you from moving on. Jesus suffered the
ultimate rejection on the cross. When He looked down from that cross, He
did not see many supporters. Peter denied Him; Judas betrayed Him and
all of the others-except John-took off. His response to the rejection
was not a curse but “Father, forgive them.” He did not give up on them;
and the very ones who rejected Him went on to conquer the world in His
name. All of them died for Him and Christ did not give up on them, and
He never, never gives up on us.
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