Sunday 22nd (2015) Mass
Homily of Fr. Raymond
St.
John tells us in today's Gospel that some Greeks approached Philip to ask him to introduce them to
Jesus. Why was it Philip they approached? Somehow, perhaps because of his
accent, they knew he was from the area called Galilee, Galilee of the Gentiles
in fact it was called. It seems there were so many gentiles living where he did
that they thought they would have a more sympathetic hearing from him than from
any of the other apostles. The others were so obviously 'dyed in the wool' Jews,
bitterly antagonistic to all that the gentiles stood for. So, it's not
surprising that it was Philip they asked to introduce them to Jesus. However,
It's obvious that this request was a bit too much for Philip to handle on his
own. So he went to ask Andrew for moral support. Andrew was a bit higher up in
the pecking order of the Apostles; after all he was Peter's Brother.
The reason
for this round about approach to Jesus was that up till then Jesus himself had
steered very much clear of the gentiles. In fact, when he first sent his
apostles out to prepare the way for him to come in person, he explicitly told
them: "Don't go to gentile towns or to gentile villages. He was very firm
about this policy himself. He even went to the extent of appearing to be cruel
about it! When a poor gentile Mother pleaded with him to deliver her daughter
from a devil, he refused at first, because, as he said "1 was sent only to
the lost sheep of the house of Israel". You need only read the Gospels to
realise how faithfully he kept to this purpose. Jesus could so easily have
imitated his great missionary disciple Paul. He
could so easily, like Paul, have travelled far and wide throughout the Roman
Empire to spread the Good News. But no, Jesus kept jealously to the mission his
Father gave him: to "go only to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel".
It's no wonder then that St Johnmakes a great deal of this
scene. This had been, for himself and for the other apostles, a moment of the
greatest significance in the mission of the Master. This was a defining moment
in the mission of the Messiah, the Messiah whom they had jealous!y regarded as
the Saviour, not of the world, but of the house of Israel only. And it's no
wonder that Jesus himself gets caught up in the greatness of the moment -
"Now, now the hour has come", he says "Now the hour has come for
the Son of Man to be glorified. Now the hour has come for the accomplishment of
the redemption of all peoples, Jews and Gentiles alike to the ends of the
earth. Now My Hour has come. Now the full scope of my mission begins"
No comments:
Post a Comment