Feast of Saint Matthew, Apostle and evangelist
September 21, 2024
Today’s Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/092124.cfm

As Jesus passed by,
he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the customs post.
He said to him, “Follow me.”
And he got up and followed him.
While he was at table in his house,
many tax collectors and sinners came
and sat with Jesus and his disciples.
The Pharisees saw this and said to his disciples,
“Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?”
He heard this and said,
“Those who are well do not need a physician, but the sick do.
Go and learn the meaning of the words,
I desire mercy, not sacrifice.
I did not come to call the righteous but sinners.”
Matthew 9:9-13
From their very first encounter, Jesus clarifies for Matthew the essence of his mission: mercy not sacrifice. Jesus uses a phrase from the Hebrew scriptures with which Matthew and all of his listeners are familiar:
For I desire mercy, not sacrifice,
Hosea 6:6
and acknowledgment of God
rather than burnt offerings.
Does the Lord delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices
1 Samuel 15:22
as much as in obeying the Lord?
To obey is better than sacrifice,
and to heed is better than the fat of rams.
Today, in God’s Lavish Mercy:
We pray for a deeper understanding that to live in loving obedience to God is to live in mercy toward all Creation.
Prose: from “The Climate of Mercy – For Albert Schweitzer” by Thomas Merton
Thus, Law without mercy kills mercy in the hearts of those who seek justification solely by socially acceptable virtuousness and by courting the favor of authority. This legal holiness, in its turn, destroys the hope of mercy in those who despair of the Law.
We must, therefore, remember the religious and Christian importance of not implicitly identifying external “Law” with interior “Mercy,” either in our doctrine (and in this we usually manage to keep them distinct) or in our lives (here we tend in practice to confuse them by making the fulfillment of the Law’s inexorable demand either a condition for receiving mercy or a guarantee that one has received it).
Music: Beautiful Mercy – sung by Jaye Thomas









