Third Sunday in Ordinary Time / Msgr. Owen F. Campion
The Sunday Readings
The Book of Isaiah supplies this weekend’s first reading. It offers us a powerful lesson.
Isaiah lived in a time when God’s people were skating on thin ice. They still had their independence, at least after a fashion. Hebrew kings still reigned in the kingdoms of Judah and Israel.
The religious, social and political structures all still gave lip service to the ancient religion, and to the holy covenant between God and the Chosen People.
However, all this was at risk because devotion to the covenant, and obedience to God’s law, was at low ebb.
Isaiah loudly warned that disaster was just around the corner. He also said that the people could rescue themselves by returning to religious faithfulness and by obeying God, as the prophets had taught the people.
of this implied a certain potential within the people. They did not sin because they were helpless in the face of temptation. Rather, they were weak because they ignored God. If they were determined, they could be virtuous.
For its second reading, the Church has chosen a selection from St. Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians.
Paul obviously loved the Corinthian Christians. He yearned to see them saintly and eternally with the Lord.
On the other hand, they troubled him because they seemed so attracted to the many vices of their great, worldly and wealthy city, and they seemed so vulnerable to the feelings of competitiveness that vex all humans if not checked.
Never willing to be passive or indifferent, he loudly called the Christians in this community to be true to their identity with Christ.
He taught a basic message. Earthly reward will pass, more quickly than anyone might realize. Earthly wisdom is only folly. True wisdom is to understand the meaning of the cross, and this understanding requires grace, available only to those who earnestly follow the Lord.
St. Matthew’s Gospel supplies the last reading.
It is situated in Capernaum, the fishing village located at the northern tip of the Sea of Galilee. Jesus is there, having left Nazareth. His public ministry has begun.
As a center of commerce, albeit very modest commerce, Capernaum saw many people come and go. Jesus used this coincidence as an opportunity to encounter many people. He called them to fidelity to God. He repeated for them the admonitions of the Hebrew prophets.
In this place, Jesus met Andrew, and then Andrew’s brother, Simon, whom Jesus renamed Peter. These brothers became the first of the Apostles in the sequence of calling.
In time, Christianity was to grow from, and build upon, the Apostles.
It is interesting that the Gospels, such as the case in this reading, refer to these Apostles so specifically. They give their names. There is no doubt about their identity. It was vital in the early Church that the teachings of the genuine Apostles be kept intact and be followed.
Reflection
These readings remind us of how blind we humans can be, and also of how powerful humans can be.
In the first reading, Isaiah criticized the people for their religious listlessness, but he also presumed that, if they wished, they could repair their wayward hearts and turn again to God.
In essence, the same message was in the second reading from Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians.
Paul boldly denounced the Corinthians’ sins and quarrels. However, by calling them to conversion, he presumed that they had the power within themselves to be holy.
We are sinners, but we need not be sinners. We can be free. Sin binds us. We can be free if we empower ourselves by disdaining sin and by being one with Christ. We encounter Christ by hearing and following the Apostles, whose works live on yet today in the Church.†