24 Aug 2025 – 21st Sunday (C)
24 Aug 2025 – 21st Sunday (C)
The value of a disciplined life is little mentioned in a permissive society. But the theme of the “narrow door” is there to make us think.
(1) Isaiah 66:18-21
The returning Jews bring non-Jews to join in the worship of God
The Lord Says: “I am coming to gather all nations and tongues; and they shall come and shall see my glory, and I will set a sign among them. From them I will send survivors to the nations, to Tarshish, Put, and Lud – which draw the bow – to Tubal and Javan, to the coastlands far away that have not heard of my fame or seen my glory; and they shall declare my glory among the nations.
They shall bring all your kindred from all the nations as an offering to the Lord, on horses, and in chariots, and in litters, and on mules, and on dromedaries, to my holy mountain Jerusalem, says the Lord, just as the Israelites bring a grain offering in a clean vessel to the house of the Lord. And I will also take some of them as priests and as Levites, says the Lord.
Responsorial: Psalm 116
R./: Go out to all the world and tell the Good News.
O praise the Lord, all you nations,
acclaim him all you peoples! (R./)
Strong is his love for us;
he is faithful for ever. (R./)
(2) Hebrews 12:5-7, 11-13
As a father disciplines his children, so our God trains us
You have forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as children: “My child, do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, or lose heart when you are punished by him; for the Lord disciplines those whom he loves, and chastises every child whom he accepts.”
Endure trials for the sake of discipline. God is treating you as children; for what child is there whom a parent does not discipline? Now, discipline always seems painful rather than pleasant at the time, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it. Therefore lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak knees, and make straight paths for your feet, so that what is lame may not be put out of joint, but rather be healed.
Gospel: Luke 13:22-30
People from every nation can enter in by the “narrow door”
Jesus went through one town and village after another, teaching as he made his way to Jerusalem. Someone asked him, “Lord, will only a few be saved?” He said to them, “Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able.
When once the owner of the house has got up and shut the door, and you begin to stand outside and to knock at the door, saying, ‘Lord, open to us,’ then in reply he will say to you, ‘I do not know where you come from.’ Then you will begin to say, ‘We ate and drank with you, and you taught in our streets.’ But he will say, ‘I do not know where you come from; go away from me, all you evildoers!’
There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth when you see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the prophets in the kingdom of God, and you yourselves thrown out. Then people will come from east and west, from north and south, and will eat in the kingdom of God. Indeed, some are last who will be first, and some are first who will be last.”
Two asides
(Padraig McCarthy:) Jesus said to them, “Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able.” Could it be that Jesus is saying: “If that’s what matters to you, then you’re making the door narrow, and you making it more difficult, not just for others, but for yourself too, to enter that narrow door. But that’s not what I want you to preoccupy yourself with. I want you to think instead of those whom you may have thought are beyond the scope of God’s mercy. If you’re a narrow door person, you’ll be in for a big surprise!” We need to take the reading in the context of the full gospel of Jesus. In three weeks time we’ll have Luke Chapter 15, where Jesus is criticised for associating with sinners – even eating with them! In reply we have the joy of the finding of the lost sheep, and the lost coin, and the joy of welcoming back a lost son.
(Joe O’Leary:) Joyce makes fun of a Jesuit brooding on “the number of the elect” in Ulysses. It is a mark of theological decrepitude that some still waste their brains on this question. The warnings of Jesus can be read off from our human existence. To the pharisees he represented a scandalously broad path of salvation. The idea that he secretly knew information of otherworldly realms stems from poor Christology. Any suggestion that ” you need to make a better effort in order to be saved” tends to miss the abundance of grace, which despite the mess Augustine made of it with his predestinationism, is the essence of the Good News.
Not everything counts
As Jesus went walking toward Jerusalem it was not as a pilgrim going up to the Temple to fulfil a religious duty. According to Luke, Jesus went around the cities and villages ‘teaching’. He needs to communicate to his people that God is a good Father who offers salvation to everyone. All are invited to receive God’s forgiveness. His message surprises everyone. Sinners are filled with joy to hear him speak of God’s unfathomable goodness: even they can hope for salvation. In the Pharisee camp, however, they criticize his message and also his welcoming of tax-collectors, prostitutes and sinners: isn’t Jesus opening up a road to the watering-down of religion and to unacceptable morals?
Someone from the crowd interrupts Jesus, to ask him about how many people will be saved, in the end. Will they be few? many? everyone? only the just? Jesus doesn’t answer his question directly. What’s important isn’t knowing exactly how many will be saved. What’s decisive is living with a clear and responsible attitude in order to welcome salvation from that Good God. Jesus reminds them all: ‘Try your hardest to enter by the narrow door’. In this way Jesus undercuts the reaction of those who understand his message as an invitation to laxity. That makes fun of the Father. Salvation isn’t something one receives irresponsibly from a permissive God. It also isn’t the privilege of an elect few. It’s not enough to be children of Abraham. It isn’t sufficient to have known the Messiah, to have heard and seen him. One needs also to follow him.
The invitation to ‘enter by the narrow door’ can be read in light of another saying of Jesus: ‘I am the door; the one who enters through me, will be saved’ (John 10:9). Entering by the narrow door is ‘following Jesus’; learning to live as he did; taking up his cross and trusting the Father who has raised him from the dead. In following him, not everything counts, not everything is equal; we need to respond to the Father’s love faithfully. What Jesus asks isn’t legalistic rigourism, but a radical love for God and neighbour. That’s why his call is a source of demand, but not of anxiety. Jesus Christ is a door that is always open. No one can close it, only ourselves if we close ourselves to his forgiveness. (José Antonio Pagola)
The Stick and the Carrot
A four-year-old was sulking under the table. He had been refused a second helping of ice-cream. His mother ordered him out, but the boy wouldn’t budge. She fried coaxing, but nothing doing. When finally she promised him the ice-cream, he trotted out triumphantly and they both went out to get his reward from the fridge. The visitor was left alone with the other witness of this little domestic scene, the little boy’s grandmother. While mother and son were being reunited over a dish of ice-cream in the kitchen, the old lady said to her visitor, “She isn’t fair to that boy; he doesn’t know any better. She should have punished him.” The visitor had never heard it put that way before: Punishment as a service due to a child. It underlined an important change in attitude between the two generations.
This change was confirmed by a survey once carried out on the religious attitudes among Irish university students. That boy might have been one of those questioned then. While 56% said they believed in heaven, only half that number, 28%, believed in hell. The ice-cream approach to wrongdoing won hands down. Reward as an incentive rather than punishment as a deterrent, was easily the more acceptable answer to wrongdoers. Incidently, 58% of those interviewed believed in wrongdoing, i.e. sin. Why should not reward and punishment both be acceptable responses to behaviour. This was the received wisdom, where both the stick and the carrot had a role in the formation of the people of God. While our first parents were expelled from the Garden of Eden as punishment for eating the forbidden fruit, the complaining followers of Moses were rewarded with manna to encourage them on their difficult way through the desert.
Political scandals involving corruption and bribery among highly-paid public figures should give us reason to reflect. It is tempting to speculate that as children they picked their mother’s purse or otherwise misbehaved, secure in the belief that they would not be caught or, at that if caught, they would go unpunished. Our present culture of impunity among the elite gets no support from the Letter to the Hebrews, says that proportionate discipline a sign of love. The Lord trains the ones he loves and tests his children. Suffering is part of our training.
By the narrow door
Responding to the beauty of a spring morning, Robert Browning wrote, “The lark’s on the wing, the snail’s on the thorn; God’s in his heaven, all’s right with the world.” While the thought is beautiful, the poem suggests a misleading concept of God, which maybe most of us entertain from time to time. “God’s in his heaven, all’s right with the world.” How often we imagine God as “away up there, somewhere,” while the world goes its separate way, with the events of every day independent of God. If the Gospel shows God in the person of Jesus Christ intervening in human affairs, combatting the evil forces at work in mankind, at the back of our minds we suspect that the battle against evil is not going God’s way.
This kind of Deism seldom bothered his chosen people, Israel, in the Old Testament. For them God was not remote, away up there. They felt a divine presence in the events, good or evil, of everyday existence. Everything in history was somehow God’s doing. Even when the cream of the nation were exiled to Babylon and their monarchy was utterly destroyed, they continued to search for the hand of God in this tragedy. Out their shattered hopes there emerged a purer, more spiritual vision of what God meant them to be. Eventually they saw their exile as the means God used to bring salvation to the pagans. They saw their destiny as still being glorious, but now from a more spiritual perspective. As stated in Isaiah, all nations would come to worship the true God in Jerusalem. God would bring good out of the catastrophe they had endured, and this would have an effect as well on nations apart from their own.
Constantly at the back of our minds we carry on, as it were, a conversation with ourselves ?” talking to ourselves, processing our hopes and fears, making plans. Relating to God means not leaving him on the fringe of all this consciousness, but making him part of it, discussing it with him, asking his guidance, his assistance, expressing to him our gratitude. All day long he is with you, and you can walk with God, you can talk with God, you can discern his loving purpose for you in every passing moment, you can rest in his presence, even while you go about your business. Gd, however, will not posses your soul unless you sincerely want him to.
Sometimes we seem to be only half Christians, without a strong spiritual awareness. We remain on a material plane, like the people in the gospel who ate and drank with Jesus and heard him preaching in their streets, but with never a change in their lives. He warns that people will come from the east and west, from the north and south, and take the places in God’s kingdom meant for those who were originally called. So we humbly ask God to help us to enter by that narrow door, to the inheritance meant for us from the beginning. May we not be found wanting but rather persevere to the end.


Key Message:
Discipline is the chisel and direction is the touch of the Divine Sculptor…
Homily:
Testimony: A 34-year-old cancer patient went to the nurse for flushing her port. The nurse, while administering her duties, started saying, “I do not know why God is making people suffer this. All are suffering like this… ” and continued to scold God. The cancer patient got offended to hear the scoldings for God. She immediately retorted, “Please do not scold God like this. I really thank God for allowing me to have this cancer, because only after this did I start experiencing closeness with Him. Now I feel so close and near to Him. I am feeling very fulfilled. Actually, my heart is so grateful to God. Now I am in Heaven on earth.”
As we see in today’s Bible reading, discipline is a gift. It is the chisel of the Divine Sculptor. The Lord, in His wisdom, is shaping your soul to reflect the beauty of Christ.
If you are suffering, it is not because God has forgotten you but because He remembers you with greater care. A parent does not discipline a stranger; only a beloved child. So too, our Heavenly Father.
In the Bible we read, “The father who spares the rod, spoils the child”.
So how can our Heavenly Father spare His rod for us?
Revelation 3:19, Jesus says it clearly:
“Those whom I love, I rebuke and discipline.”
This is not the harsh chastisement of a judge, but the firm yet tender correction of a Saviour, who sees the saint within the sinner.
One day, I heard a parent say smilingly yet earnestly, “My Jesus is transforming me from a sinner to a saint, through my kid.”
Probably many of us could resonate with these words.
Each correction from our Lord is personal. Precise. Purposeful.
The great way of our Lord Jesus is, along with disciplining, He will also direct us.
“Martha, Martha,” the Lord answered, “you are worried and upset about many things, but few things are needed — or indeed only one. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her.”
Our Lord disciplines Martha by pointing out her mistake and not heeding her request.
He directs her by showing the right way, by giving the example of her sister Mary.
Our Lord Jesus disciplines and directs us in His own way.
Meditation:
Imagine, now, that you are walking with Jesus in a quiet, dew-kissed garden. The trees sway in the morning breeze. A bench awaits beneath a fig tree, and both of you sit down.
You are weary. There are bruises on your heart; disappointments, wounds, unanswered prayers.
Jesus sits beside you. His gaze is calm, steady, loving. He says:
“Beloved, do not lose heart. I am not far in your trial — I am most near. Every pruning you endure, I endure with you.”
You look into His eyes and whisper:
“But Lord, it hurts. Why do You allow this pain?”
He answers:
“Because I want you to be strong in love. I want you to rise above shallow joys and build your heart in eternal things. My discipline is My embrace.”
You pause. The wind stills.
You now realize that your trial is not a punishment, but a training. The Gardener is preparing you to bear fruit, not just for yourself, but for others. You resolve, right there beneath the fig tree:
“Lord, I will trust You in my pain. I will not resist Your hand. Teach me to walk the path of righteousness with joy.”
He smiles. A bird sings. You rise with strength not your own.