21st Sunday of Year B

August 25, 2024

Holy See

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SOURCE: Vatican News – English

21st Sunday of Year B

YEAR B

Making Decisions

Making decisions is the key to the different texts of today’s liturgy. The tribes gathered by Joshua at Shechem must decide whether to serve Yahweh or other gods. They decide to serve Yahweh (first reading). Jesus confronts his disciples, who are scandalized by his words (eat my flesh and drink my blood), with a decision: “What about you? Do you want to go away too?” Peter replies on behalf of the other disciples, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the message of eternal life” (Gospel). Finally, in the second reading, Christ’s irrevocable decisions for his Church serve as an example of the mutual decision of husband and wife to love one another.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

Catechism Cross-References

Catechism
Cross-References

First Reading

Jos 24:1-2a, 15-17, 18b

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Courtesy of Catholic Cross Reference Online

Second Reading

Eph 5:21-32

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Courtesy of Catholic Cross Reference Online

Gospel Reading

Jn 6:60-69

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21st Sunday of Year B

YEAR B

Doctrinal Messages

Making decisions in a responsible way

Being a rational human being means making decisions concerning the small and great things of life. In other words, to live one must make decisions. This is already something very important, for it distinguishes us from all the other creatures. However, it is not the whole picture, for one may make right as well as wrong decisions. Making the right decision is more important than making decisions at all. What does making a good decision involve? Here are some significant aspects: 1) Making the right decision means leaving something behind. It means leaving behind all the elements that prevent or at least make it difficult to make the right decision. The tribes of Israel must give up, renounce the gods of their parents and the gods of the Amorites (first reading). The disciples must let go of their cultural and religious prejudices before the scandal of the Eucharist (Gospel). Husbands and wives must give up any other spousal love that is not the love of their spouse (second reading). 2) To make the right decision means preferring. Certainly, to prefer good over evil, but in many occasions it means preferring best over good. One prefers the good and the best, according to the vocation and mission that each one has received in life. Everything that is in contrast with the call to be a Christian must be left behind, and everything that fosters it must be preferred. Whatever contributes most to making me live a Christian life is what I must prefer over other things, as good as they may be. This is the way to make a responsible decision.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

Making decisions based on faith

In order for a decision to be responsible, it must be based on solid foundations. Such foundations cannot consist of mere feelings, tastes, whims or personal convenience; nor can they depend on cold pure reason, or solid willpower. One must decide on the basis of one’s faith, on the basis of one’s total confidence in the faithfulness and power of God. The Israelites felt attracted by the gods of neighboring villages, but they had the experience that Yahweh is the only faithful God, rich in mercy. In living with Jesus, Peter and the disciples experienced that only he "has the words of eternal life," as scandalous as it may sound to their ears. When a man and a woman say "yes" to each other forever, they do so "in the Lord," that is, they confide in the power of God that will help them to stick to their decision. It is faith, a clear, firm, certain, irrevocable faith, which drives and sets in motion the human capacity to make decisions. When instead of being based on faith or reason enlightened by faith our decisions are grounded on something else, there is the great risk that the decision will fall apart as the years go by, as situations change, with the daily wear and tear of living together. Faith grounds our decisions in truth and goodness, which are immovable pillars, enduring all attacks and weathering all storms.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

Mysterium amoris

The Eucharist is the ultimate and supreme gesture of love that God invented for humanity. In the Gospel, Jesus tells us, "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood lives in me and I live in him... so whoever eats me will also draw life from me." These are formulae which tell us about living in Love, being possessed by Love, living for Love. To the extent the human creature has experienced a love that is not purely physical and has been elevated to other forms of love, he will be better prepared to grasp the love of Christ in the Eucharist. It is a love that was originally spiritual and supernatural, but that given the nature of the human being, comes to include the sensible sphere and our entire psychosomatic reality as persons. It is a Love, present in the bread of the Eucharist, which the Christian assembly celebrates and worships in the Sunday liturgy with songs and hymns of praise and acts of thanksgiving (second reading). Love deserves to be celebrated publicly so that it may permeate us all and so that we may bear witness to it before the others.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

21st Sunday of Year B

YEAR B

Pastoral Suggestions

Do not make decisions superficially

In our society, decisions are frequently made superficially. Certainly, there are many minor decisions that one makes each day without even thinking, and that do not have any evident importance or consequences. For example, what time to go out shopping, which restaurant to go to for dinner or what menu to choose for Sunday’s meal. However, it would be best to think even before making such decisions, to develop the ability and habit of always making mature decisions. Nevertheless, there are certain decisions which not only affect a single moment or one given aspect, but our entire life. For example, whether or not to marry, whom to marry, whether or not to change religion, whether or not to have an abortion, whether or not to practice a religion, whether or not to work in the parish, whether to chose this or that profession, etc. These decisions should never be taken lightly. Otherwise, one would be hurting oneself very seriously, in addition to greatly damaging society in general and especially the society of one’s own family. How it is possible that we sometimes make decisions in such a superficial way on matters of such importance? The answer that I give myself is that people, especially the youngest generations, have not been trained to make decisions on the basis of the truth and on the basis of what is good. They are the children of the ephemeral present, they are the children of the disposable culture, they are the children of immediate gratification. How are they going to be put in the position to make decisions for a lifetime?

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

Decisions must be formed

There are people who by virtue of their temperament are more capable of making decisions, and others who are less determined or undecided. Regardless of one’s temperament, we must learn to make decisions, so that the decisions we make are firm, responsible and mature. Those with a more determined temperament will have to be more prudent when making decisions, so that they do not run too many risks. Those with a more undecided temperament will have to develop a sense of fearlessness and courage, so as to adequately come to a decision. Both should learn to make decisions with full awareness and freedom, so that they may decide in a way that is worthy of a human being. A decision taken by force, whether psychological, physical or moral, will never be a good decision, nor will it allow us to grow in our human dignity. In order for the human being to make right and enriching decisions, decisions will have to be related to their object; in other words, to the knowledge of good and truth. A good decision matures under the heat of reflection and pondering, foreign on the one hand to any haste and recklessness, and on the other to all abandonment, mental laziness or perplexity. Are parents educating their children to make mature decisions? As adults, are we setting the example of good, firm and responsible decisions for our children? Are we convinced that building a decision-making capacity in a man is more important for his future than being computer-literate or having a university degree?

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

Pope Francis

Attitudes of Disbelief
and Withdrawal

22 August 2021 | Saint Peter’s Square

Let us look briefly at the attitude of those who withdrew and decided not to follow Jesus any more. Where does this disbelief come from? What is the reason for this rejection?

Jesus’ words enkindled great scandal: he was saying that God decided to manifest himself and accomplish salvation in the weakness of human flesh. It is the mystery of the incarnation. The incarnation of God is what provoked scandal and presented an obstacle for those people — but often for us too. Indeed, Jesus affirms that the true bread of salvation, which transmits eternal life, is his very flesh; that to enter into communion with God, before observing the laws or satisfying religious precepts, it is necessary to live out a real and concrete relationship with him. Because salvation came from him, in his incarnation. This means that one must not pursue God in dreams and in images of grandeur and power, but he must be recognized in the humanity of Jesus and, as a consequence, in that of the brothers and sisters we meet on the path of life. God made himself flesh. And when we say this, in the Creed, on Christmas Day, on the day of the Annunciation, we kneel to worship this mystery of the incarnation. God made himself flesh and blood; he lowered himself to the point of becoming a man like us. He humbled himself to the extent of burdening himself with our sufferings and sin, and therefore he asks us to seek him not outside of life and history, but in relationship with Christ and with our brothers and sisters. Seeking him in life, in history, in our daily life. And this, brothers and sisters, is the road to the encounter with God: the relationship with Christ and our brothers and sisters.

Even today, God’s revelation in Jesus’ humanity can cause scandal and is not easy to accept. This is what Saint Paul calls the “folly” of the Gospel in the face of those who seek miracles or worldly wisdom (cf. 1 Cor 1:18-25). And this “scandalousness” is well represented by the sacrament of the Eucharist: what sense can there be, in the eyes of the world, in kneeling before a piece of bread? Why on earth should someone be nourished assiduously with this bread? The world is scandalized.

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26 Agust 2018 | Saint Peter’s Square

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Lord, to whom shall we go?

23 August 2015 | Saint Peter’s Square

21st Sunday of Year B

Jesus’ words always throw us into crisis, for example, the worldly spirit, worldliness. But Jesus offers the key for overcoming this difficulty; a key consisting of three elements. First, his divine origin: he came down from heaven and will ascend again to “where he was before” (v. 62). Second: his words can be understood only through the action of the Holy Spirit. The One who “gives life” (v. 63) is precisely the Holy Spirit who enables us to understand Jesus properly. Third: the true cause of incomprehension of his words is the lack of faith: “there are some of you that do not believe” (v. 64), Jesus says. In fact from that time, the Gospel says, “many of his disciples drew back” (v. 66). In the face of these desertions, Jesus does not compromise and does not mince words, indeed he demands that a precise choice be made: either to stay with him or leave him, and he says to the Twelve: “Will you also go away?” (v. 67).

At this point Peter makes his confession of faith on behalf of the other Apostles: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (v. 68). He does not say “where shall we go?”, but “to whom shall we go?”. The underlying problem is not about leaving and abandoning the work undertaken, but to whom to go. From Peter’s question we understand that fidelity to God is a question of fidelity to a person, to whom we bind ourselves to walk together on the same road. And this person is Jesus. All that we have in the world does not satisfy our infinite hunger. We need Jesus, to be with him, to be nourished at his table, on his words of eternal life! Believing in Jesus means making him the centre, the meaning of our life. Christ is not an optional element: he is the “Living Bread”, the essential nourishment. Binding oneself to him, in a true relationship of faith and love, does not mean being tied down, but being profoundly free, always on the journey. Each one of us can ask him- or herself: who is Jesus for me? Is he a name, an idea, simply an historical figure? Or is he truly that person who loves me and gave his life for me and walks with me? Who is Jesus for you? Are you with Jesus? Do you try to comprehend him in his word? Do you read the Gospel, each day a passage from the Gospel to learn to know Jesus? Do you carry a small Gospel in your pocket, handbag, to read it, in whatever place? Because the more we are with him the more the desire to be with him grows. Now I ask you, please, let us have a moment of silence and let each one of us silently, in our hearts, ask ourselves the question: “Who is Jesus for me?”. Silently, each one, answer in your heart.

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Christ’s Provocation

16 August 2012 | Castel Gandolfo

On the past few Sundays we have meditated on the “Bread of Life” discourse, which Jesus gave in the Synagogue of Capernaum after satisfying the hunger of thousands of people with five loaves and two fish. The Gospel today presents the disciples’ reaction to this discourse, a reaction which Christ himself deliberately provoked.

First of all, the Evangelist John — who was present with the other Apostles — says: “After this many of his disciples drew back and no longer went about with him” (Jn 6:66). Why? Because they did not believe in the words of Jesus who said: “I am the living bread which came down from heaven… he who eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life” (cf. Jn 6:51, 54); words that were truly difficult to accept, incomprehensible. This revelation — as I have said — was incomprehensible to them because they understood it in a purely literal sense, whereas these words foretold the Paschal Mystery of Jesus, in which he was to give himself for the world’s salvation: the new presence of the Blessed Eucharist.

Seeing that many of his disciples were deserting him, Jesus turned to the Apostles, asking them: “Will you also go away?” (Jn 6:67). As on other occasions it was Peter who answered on behalf of the Twelve: “Lord, to whom shall we go?”. We, too, might wonder: to whom should we go? “You have the words of eternal life; and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God” (Jn 6:68-69).

We have a beautiful comment of St Augustine on this passage. In one of his sermons on John 6 he says: “See how Peter, by the gift of God and the renewal of the Holy Spirit, understood Him. How other than because he believed? ‘You have the words of eternal life’. For You have eternal life in the ministration of Your body [Risen] and Your blood [Yourself]. ‘And we have believed and have known’. He does not say: ‘we have known and then believed’, but ‘we have believed and then known’. We believed in order to know; for if we wanted to know first, and then to believe, we should not be able either to know or to believe. What have we believed and known? ‘That You are Christ, the Son of God’; that is, that You are that very eternal life, and that You give in Your flesh and blood only that which You are” (In Evangelium Johannis tractatus, 27, 9). St Augustine addressed this homily to his believers.

Finally, Jesus knew that among the Twelve Apostles there was also one who did not believe: Judas. Judas could have gone away too, as did many of the disciples; indeed, perhaps if he had been honest he would have been bound to leave. Instead he stayed on with Jesus. He did not stay out of faith or out of love, but rather with the secret intention of taking revenge on the Teacher. Why? Because Judas felt let down by Jesus and decided that he, in his turn, would betray Jesus. Judas was a zealot and he wanted a victorious Messiah who would lead a revolt against the Romans. Jesus had not measured up to these expectations. The problem was that Judas did not go away and his greatest sin was his deceitfulness, which is the mark of the Devil. For this reason Jesus said to the Twelve: “One of you is a devil” (Jn 6:70). Let us pray to the Virgin Mary to help us believe in Jesus, like St Peter, and always to be sincere with him and with everyone.

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SOURCE: The Holy See Archive at the Vatican Website © Libreria Editrice Vaticana