Dai­ly Reflec­tion
June 26, 2022

Sunday of the Thir­teenth week in Ordi­nary Time
Lectionary: 99
Eileen Wirth

And to anoth­er he said, “Fol­low me. ”But he replied, “Lord, let me go first and bury my father.”
But he answered him, “Let the dead bury their dead. But you, go and pro­claim the king­dom of God.” And anoth­er said, “I will fol­low you, Lord, but first let me say farewell to my fam­i­ly at home. ”To him Jesus said, “No one who sets a hand to the plow and looks to what was left behind is fit for the king­dom of God.”
- Luke

It’s a good thing that sal­va­tion is a gift rather than some­thing we can earn or we’re all in trou­ble. Based on today’s read­ing from Luke, even the best peo­ple I know fail the stan­dards Jesus sets, let alone us ordi­nary people.

The pas­sage is fright­en­ing in demand­ing that we let the dead bury the dead and sim­ply walk away from our fam­i­lies to fol­low Jesus.

I sym­pa­thize with the peo­ple who instead walked away from him. Who would want to fol­low some­one so harsh? If this were my only encounter with Jesus, I wouldn’t be a Chris­t­ian. For­tu­nate­ly, it’s not. 

As I puz­zled over what to make of this pas­sage, I recalled a recent homi­ly by the wise and won­der­ful Lar­ry Gillick S.J. In it, he grad­ed him­self an F as a Chris­t­ian or fail­ing to live up to one of Jesus’s tougher com­mands (sor­ry, I for­get which one). For­tu­nate­ly, he remind­ed us, Jesus still loves us. Thank you, Fr. Gillick!

Maybe there’s hope even though I can’t think of any­one who is “fit for the king­dom of God” based on the cri­te­ria in today’s reading.

Despite this, the “A” stu­dent in me still asks what I can do to make the grade. Maybe our ordi­nary efforts will suf­fice even as Jesus chal­lenges us to raise our stan­dards. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, it’s shock­ing­ly easy to fail to meet even my own  mod­est standards.

Just hours before writ­ing this reflec­tion, I proved this dur­ing a trip to the gro­cery store. My local chain offers us a chance to donate our change to the food bank by push­ing an “agree” but­ton on the com­put­er screen.

But I didn’t. Why? I’m still ask­ing myself this since I would nev­er miss the 75 cents and I donate reg­u­lar­ly to the Food Bank.

Jesus asks his fol­low­ers to aban­don every­thing to pro­claim the king­dom and I can’t even push a but­ton on a screen to make a tiny dona­tion to feed the hun­gry???  What’s wrong with me? It’s humbling.

Mea cul­pa!

So, Fr. Gillick, I stand with you in the “F” line as a “wan­na be Chris­t­ian” who trusts in God’s mer­cy and sec­ond chances. You’d bet­ter believe I’ll be touch­ing that “agree” but­ton from now on and sent a check for more than 75 cents to the Food Bank! 

Eileen Wirth

Pro­fes­sor Emeri­ta of Journalism

I’m a retired Creighton jour­nal­ism pro­fes­sor, active in St. John’s parish and a CLC mem­ber. In retire­ment, I write books about state and local his­to­ry, includ­ing a his­to­ry of the parish, and do vol­un­teer PR con­sult­ing for groups like Habi­tat for Human­i­ties, refugees etc. I love to read, work out, spend time with fam­i­ly and friends includ­ing those who can no longer get out much. 

Writ­ing reflec­tions has deep­ened my faith by requir­ing me to engage deeply with Jesus through the Scrip­tures. In the many years I have been doing this, I’ve also formed friend­ships with reg­u­lar read­ers nation­al­ly, most of whom I have nev­er met. Hear­ing from read­ers and what I learn by writ­ing make  the hours I spend on each reflec­tion well worth the effort.