“FIRST IMPRESSIONS”
32nd SUNDAY
(B) NOVEMBER 10, 2024
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Kings: 17:10-16; Psalm 146; Hebrews 9: 24-28; Mark 12: 38-44
by Jude Siciliano, OP
Dear Preachers:
There was a drought in Israel. (Perhaps not unlike the current drought in
Africa.) All people suffered its consequences, not only the Jews, but their
pagan neighbors as well. God sent Elijah to the widow of Zarephath, a Gentile.
That is a consistent theme in the Hebrew Scriptures: God’s concern for the
powerless. The widow and her child would be the most vulnerable; she has no
husband to help and protect her and her son. God does what God always does: sees
those most in need and responds.
Initially, Elijah does not make a good first impression on the needy widow. She
was gathering wood for a fire to cook her last meal for herself and her son.
Elijah did not immediately help her. In fact, he added to the burden she was
already bearing by asking for water, in a time of drought and for bread from her
diminished supplies! He seems demanding. But Elijah is inviting her to faith: if
she makes him the bread he asked for, God will miraculously provide for her and
her son throughout the famine. The widow does not have much, but if she gives up
what little she has, God will provide for her. She has no visible proof this is
so, but she puts faith in Elijah’s assurance of God’s care for her.
We may not have much to offer in service to God. But are we willing to give what
little we have to experience God working with us, through our resources, as
little as they may be? Can we think of a time when we did just as the widow did,
gave not from our surplus, but from what was essential for us. In doing so we
might have even ignored our own needs.
Did we give generously, not only from our money, but from our gifts of time and
talent, because we saw a greater need. For example: in our marriage, a
friendship, our local community, our church family? It is hard to give with the
kind of generosity we see in the widow in the Temple whom Jesus says gave, “…
all she had, her whole livelihood.” It is very hard to give with the generosity
the widow showed. Her generosity is striking. I tend to want to hold back
something, “just in case.” On the other hand. the widow gave the very last of
what they had.
In the gospel scene Jesus is watching people come and go. He is at the women’s
court where there were 13 trumpet-shaped containers into which people dropped
their offerings. Imagine the sound the widow’s two small coins made. While the
clanging of the wealthy’s money would certainly have drawn attention. The sound
difference would have been a marker that the widow’s offering was puny. Don’t
you think that she felt self-conscious and humbled before others?
Jesus has been in controversies with the religious elite, who held power among
the people. He rebukes them for building their power and wealth, even the Temple
itself, on the backs of the poor. “They devour the houses of widows….” The
widow’s gift will go for the upkeep of the Temple. Ironically, at the time of
the gospel of Mark, the temple had been, or was about to be, destroyed.
Jesus took his disciples aside criticizing the source of the offerings. The rich
contributed from their surplus, while the widow gave from all she had, “...her
whole livelihood.” The woman’s giving was heroic. It also reflected Christ’s
heroic gift of himself for our sins. She was not looking for a reward. She just
placed all she had into God’s hands. It is clear from Jesus’ words the God
noticed. Soon Jesus will make his total offering to God as well, and God will
notice. Jesus is like the widow in the gospel, giving all in faith to God.
Jesus praised the widow who, in her community, would have been insignificant.
But her small gift is recognized by Jesus and, in effect, is blessed. We are
about to bring our own gifts to the altar – bread, wine and the fruits of the
collection from the community. They are gifts in themselves, but they also
represent the gift of ourselves. Along with the bread and wine, we place
ourselves on the altar and pray that the Spirit, who changes them into the body
and blood of Christ, will also receive and change our lives into Christ’s
presence in the world. Like Christ, through the Spirit, we make a generous gift
of ourselves in service to others in Christ’s name.
The Pharisees sought the esteem of others by wearing in public the same garments
they wore in the synagogues. They wanted people to admire them as prayerful and
hoped to be treated special. This show of piety would earn them front seats in
the synagogues. It would also draw attention to themselves at banquets and where
they would receive seats of honor. They may have been vain, but that was not
immoral in Jesus’ eyes? No, what Jesus condemns is that they swindled money from
widows. (Today’s scam artists do that through phone calls and the Internet.) To
make matters worse they took possession of widow’s property in the name of
religion.
We began November with the celebration of All Saints and the Commemoration of
All Souls. They remind us that, at some date, near or far off in the future, we
will be asked not to hold anything back, but to give at the moment of our death
all we have to the Lord. These are joyful and sobering feasts that remind us to
celebrate the goodness of our lives and to offer our lives back to God who gave
them to us. In the light of these festivals, we do our best to hold nothing back
in our service to God. In order to make a total gift of ourselves to God at our
ending, we practice now growing in generosity in how we love God and serve one
another.
So now, what is holding us back and what shall we let go of? We are grateful for
the Word of God and the Eucharist we are celebrating, for they can do for us
what we cannot do on our own: transform us into self-giving vessels, overflowing
with God’s grace and love for all people.