Homily for Monday of the 34th week of Ordinary Time (Year 1, 2019 – original Italian).

How much does it cost to enter the Kingdom of Heaven?
Perhaps a lot. In the Gospels, the rich never seem to have enough. If we arrive at the gates of paradise with suitcases full of banknotes, it seems that won’t be enough. In eternity, they probably won’t accept credit cards, either.
Perhaps it costs very little. The widow offers just two cents. But if we have listened to the readings from the Old Testament in recent days—the sufferings of the Israelites under pagan rulers and in exile—we know that the price of fidelity can be very high. Martyrs pay with their blood.
Perhaps it is free. God does not need money. He created the world. What would he buy? Still, Jesus praises the widow for making an offering.
So, how much does it cost to enter the Kingdom of Heaven? The answer is everything. No more and no less.
Offering everything to the Lord means that no aspect of our lives is outside the Lord’s presence. Not just certain moments of worship–but also our financial, family, social, political, and professional decisions must be made with God at the center. The young Jews in the first reading from the book of Daniel put fidelity to divine law at the center of their lives, even in the service of the king of Babylon. We owe God nothing less than everything.
But nothing more, either. That is, God does not expect from us something we do not have, something we are not. If we are not the richest, God does not care. If we are not the strongest, God does not care. If we are not the most intelligent or the most beautiful or the most famous, God absolutely does not care. God does not want these things from us. He wants what we have–or, rather, he wants what we are. He wants an offering of ourselves.
This is, in fact, the offering that God makes to us in the sacrament we are about to celebrate. Physically, the Eucharist is not very big. But it is certainly not little. It is God’s gift of himself.
And that is everything.
(Original: Italian)
Readings: Daniel 1:1-6, 8-20; Lk 21:1-4
Church of the Gesù, Rome
November 2019
I was happy to be invited back to the pages of First Things last week to discuss celebrities, scandal, and the sacrament of confirmation. Check out the article: Sacraments of Initiation or Affirmation?
Simple and yet profound. God requires everything of us and yet it is free. Another seeming paradox of our faith. Thank you Fr. Tony
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Simple and yet profound. God requires everything of us and yet it is free. Another seeming paradox of our faith. Thank you Fr. Tony
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