Homily For The 29th Sunday Of Ordinary Time, Year A  

World Mission Sunday

Readings: 1st: Is 45:1. 4-6; Ps:95; 2nd: I Thes 1, 1-5; Gos: Mt 22:15-21

This brief reflection was written by Fr. Njoku Canice Chukwuemeka, C.S.Sp. He is a Catholic Priest and a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans). He is a missionary in Puerto Rico. He is the Parish Priest of Parroquia la Resurrección del Senor, Canóvanas, and the Major Superior of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans), Circumscription of Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. He was the chancellor of the Diocese of Fajardo Humacao, Puerto Rico. Fr. Canice is a member of the Academy of Homiletics. For more details and comments contact him at: canice_c_njoku@yahoo.com, canicechukwuemeka@gmail.com

(https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8452-8392)

“How can they believe if they have not heard the message? How can they hear if the message is not proclaimed? How can the message be proclaimed if the messengers are not sent out? How wonderful are the feet of the preachers of the good news!” (Ro 10:14ff).

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Today, the twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time, we celebrate the 97th World Mission Day. For this reason, the mission “ad gentes” continues to be most urgent. All the members of the Church are called to participate in this mission. Today is a privileged moment to engage in prayer and concrete gestures of solidarity to support God’s mission.

It is a celebration of grace because the Holy Spirit, sent by the Father, offers wisdom and strength to those who are obedient to his actions. It is a celebration of joy because Jesus Christ, the Father’s Son, who was sent to evangelize the world, supports and accompanies our missionary efforts.

In today’s second reading, Paul and his companions prayed for the church of Thessalonica. They preached the good news there but knew only God could sustain their work. So, they knew the importance of prayer in the mission. Therefore, we must continue to pray for missionaries as the Holy Father reminds us today.

We are called to play the same significant role played by St. Theresa of the Child Jesus. She never went on any foreign mission. Nevertheless, she was fervent in her prayers for the success of missionaries. Today, she is the patron saint of missionaries. Paul realized the importance of prayers for the success of his mission, so he pleaded: “Pray also for me, that I may be bold in speaking about the gospel as I should” (Eph 6, 19-20).

In today’s gospel, the Pharisees sought a way to discredit Christ’s message. This gospel reminds us of a fundamental reality that every missionary faces. As much as we preach the good news, detractors and difficulties abound. Hence, the Pharisees in today’s gospel represent the different obstacles a missionary must encounter in his work.

They come in different shapes and forms. They come like tests, various temptations, doubts, persecutions, threats to life, calumny, and alienation or loneliness, even amid people. Therefore, for a missionary to overcome all these and be successful in today’s world, He or she “must be as wise as a serpent and as gentle as a dove (Mt 10, 16). He or she must be a person of prayer and strong faith.

Any attack against missionaries is an attack against the good news or the gospel. When missionaries suffer, the good news suffers too. However, God, the owner of the mission is always in control and the good news always wins the battle. So, today the church offers us an opportunity to participate in this battle. We will win it with faith, prayer and solidarity with each other.

The joy of being a missionary does not come from what one receives. Instead, it comes from how many lives one touches and how much joy one can bring to others. It also comes from how much love one can communicate and give to others through the gospel.

Finally, Pope Francis exhorts us in his message for this 97th Mission Sunday: “Let us set out again, illuminated by the encounter with the Risen Lord and animated by his Spirit. Let us go out with fervent hearts, open eyes, feet on the path, to ignite other hearts with the Word of God, open the eyes of others to Jesus, the Eucharist, and invite everyone to walk together on the path of peace and salvation that God, in Christ, has given to humanity.” (Francis, Rome, Saint John Lateran, January 6, 2023, Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord).

Peace be with you all!

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Maranatha!

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