21st Sunday 2025
Isaiah 66:18-21; Hebrews 12:5-7, 11-13; Luke 13:22-30
The compilers of the Lectionary have been bowling us some real googlies recently, and today is no exception. My question is: are we to be encouraged by today’s readings, or alarmed?
My suspicion is that the answer to that is “a bit of both”. We should be encouraged, but we cannot be complacent. The encouragement can be found in all three readings, which remind us that salvation, and membership of God’s people, are open to everyone and not only to God’s original chosen people, the Jews.
We begin with the conclusion to the Book of Isaiah. This part of the Book, attributed to a prophet whom we call Trito-Isaiah (Third Isaiah), dates from the period after the return of the Jewish people from exile in Babylon, and their settlement in their own ancestral homeland. It was a time of optimism, expressed by the prophet who foresees “all nations and tongues” being brought into God’s people, including those who “have not heard my fame or seen my glory”.
So far, so positive, and we can, to an extent, recognise the fulfilment of that prophecy in the Church, the new Israel. Or should we perhaps say that we see its potential fulfilment? Very many people still do not recognise the one God; and the Church has, over the millennia, behaved abominably towards the Jewish people, the original People of God.
Steps have been taken to address that wrong, especially in “Nostra Aetate” the Second Vatican Council’s Declaration on the Church’s relations with non-Christian Religions, which recognises that the Jewish people continue to enjoy a special relationship with God through the Covenants. This was reinforced by Pope Benedict XVI who, in his magnificent three volume “Jesus of Nazareth” stated that we are not in the business of trying to convert Jews, who have their own way to God.
“Nostra Aetate” also states that the Church “rejects nothing that is good” in other non-Christian religions, and expresses particular respect for the Muslims. Sadly, we are only too aware of the persistence of antisemitism, exacerbated by the behaviour of the current Israeli government, and of the persistence of jihadism among Muslims who seek to impose Islam on the world by force.
We find further encouragement in the Letter to the Hebrews, which reminds us that we are sons and daughters of God, a breathtaking realisation. Yet much of this passage is spent pointing out that our relationship with God isn’t all wine and roses, or cakes and ale. It involves discipline, something which Jesus Himself expressed in terms of “taking up the Cross”. Attempting a painless following of Christ is a venture doomed to failure.
Turning to the Gospel, we find the greatest challenge of all, as the Lord declares that many who claim to know Him are in for a rude awakening. The Way of the Cross to which we are called entails striving to “enter through the narrow door”. That doesn’t mean that we should be attempting to make life difficult for ourselves: rather, that if we are truly faithful to Christ, then He will give us a share in His sufferings.
If we claim to know Jesus, but do not encounter suffering, then that is not the true Jesus, but a figure of our own making. If the Cross does not chafe our shoulders at times, if our path seems completely smooth, then we are on the wrong path, and we will not find the narrow door to which Jesus directs us. There is no need to go in for self-flagellation; our genuine commitment to Jesus, our faithful carrying of the Cross, will do that for us.
This passage may at first strike us as grim, but once more there is plenty to encourage us. “People will come from East and West and from North and South to recline at table in the Kingdom of God.” Potentially, those people are us, who were not part of the original chosen people, but who have now been adopted as sons and daughters of God. In the last analysis, the question is “What are we making of that adoption?”