Be Merciful

Twenty-fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time
September 17, 2023

Today’s Readings:

https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/091723.cfm


Today, in God’s Lavish Mercy, we pray with Psalm 103, and its gentle comforting refrain:

The Lord is kind and merciful, 
slow to anger, and rich in compassion.


Our Sunday readings encourage to become like this merciful, forgiving, patient, compassionate God.

I’m not doing so well at that. Anybody else with me? Sometimes I feel like we’re living in a desert devoid of humanness and reverence, and I am an unfortunate part of it!

Somehow, in our current political and cultural environment, too often I feel angry and even outraged. Those kinds of feelings don’t leave much room for compassion and its accompanying virtues!


Recently I witnessed two wonderful friends openly spat on social media because of their opposing political camps. I’ve seen family members shut each other out for the same reasons. We can’t turn on the TV without seeing a barrage of hateful words and actions unleashed against other human beings.

I feel poisoned and sick when I see the culture we have brewed for ourselves!


In our first reading, Sirach seems to have felt pretty sickened by his environment too. He counsels his listeners:

Forgive your neighbor’s injustice;
then when you pray, your own sins will be forgiven.
Could anyone nourish anger against another
and expect healing from the LORD?

Sirach 28:2-3

Paul, in our second reading, tells us why we should change our hateful behavior:

None of us lives for oneself, and no one dies for oneself.
For if we live, we live for the Lord,
and if we die, we die for the Lord;
so then, whether we live or die, we are the Lord’s.

Romans 14:7-8

In our Gospel, Jesus uses a stunning parable to drive home the commandment for forgiveness. I don’t think any of us really wants to end up like the selfish, wicked servant – handed over to the torture of our own hatreds.

Then in anger his master handed him over to the torturers
until he should pay back the whole debt.
So will my heavenly Father do to you,
unless each of you forgives your brother from your heart.

Matthew 18:35

This Sunday’s readings are serious. They’re not kidding. We have to change any sinful incivility or hate that resides in our hearts. We may not be able to change our feelings. But we can stop feeding them with lies, propaganda, and conspiracy theories.

What we can change are our actions and words. And we must.


Poetry: Love my enemies, enemy my love by Rebecca Seiferle

Oh, we fear our enemy’s mind, the shape
in his thought that resembles the cripple
in our own, for it’s not just his fear
we fear, but his love and his paradise .

We fear he will deprive us of our peace
of mind, and, fearing this, are thus deprived,
so we must go to war, to be free of this
terror, this unremitting fear, that he might

he might, he might. Oh it’s hard to say
what he might do or feel or think.
Except all that we cannot bear of
feeling or thinking—so his might

must be met with might of armor
and of intent—informed by all the hunker
down within the bunker of ourselves.
How does he love? and eat? and drink?

He must be all strategy or some sick lie.
How can reason unlock such a door,
for we bar it too with friends and lovers,
in waking hours, on ordinary days?

Finding the other so senseless and unknown,
we go to war to feel free of the fear
of our own minds, and so come
to ruin in our hearts of ordinary days.


Music: Kyrie Eleison – Lord, have Mercy

This is an extended, meditative singing of the prayer. I like to listen to it in the very early morning. Just doing that is a good prayer for me.

7 thoughts on “Be Merciful

  1. Can’t believe you had time to put this reflection together! “Love One Another”…a quote that’s very special to you! Shoulder’s Day this afternoon at McAuley was a phenomenal day…weather, McAuley nuns, guests, awesome DJ, yummy Hot Dog Food truck, Philly pretzels, face painting, flower arrangements for the nuns who couldn’t come outside…and the list goes on!!! You & your Shoulder’s gang did an unbelievable job! There was a lot of ” Loving One Another” going on today! You will sleep tight tonight! Thank You & your “gang’!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Lucille Hillerman's avatar Lucille Hillerman

    Your reflections hit home so many times. Yes, it is a struggle everyday to show true forgiveness. But that being said, yesterday put me in the midst of true Mercy! It was an absolutely joyous day. Thank you Renee! ❤️🙏

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Dee's avatar Dee

    It is exhausting to read the political news these days.
    I am not sure that I can link forgiveness with respect to the discord we are witnessing between the two political parties. While I cannot embrace the other party’s views, I attempt to understand how they came to those positions.
    Unfortunately, when I try to dialogue with those of the opposing party, I am often met with a defensive pose, and sometimes even hostility—no interest on their part to understand a view other than their own!

    Interestingly, at Mass this morning, I noted many empty pews. Where are the people who followed the recommendations offered by our priest and deacon before the 2020 elections, suggesting that as Catholics, we must vote with our conscience with respect to choosing the candidate who pledged to reverse Roe v. Wade.

    At that time, I debated with our deacon that it wasn’t necessary for him to endorse re-electing an immoral person. We could still reverse Roe v. Wade because Coney Barrett had already been nominated for the Supreme Court position, thereby assuring the Catholic position on the right to life would be restored. He argued back vigorously in support of the presidential candidate.
    Now, that same candidate has been served with how many indictments?

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