At the darkest moment in Israel’s
history, a most unlikely hero set everything right
Homily for the 29th Sunday
in Ordinary Time, 2023
The most
traumatic event in the Old Testament for the Jewish people was the Babylonian
captivity. It began about 600 years
before Jesus’ birth, and lasted about 60 years.
The Babylonians took most of the Jews away from their land.
About 60
years after the Jewish people are taken away into exile, King Cyrus of Persia conquers
the Babylonians, then sets the Jewish people free,
Not only
does King Cyrus set them free, he then writes letters to all the surrounding
governors of Jerusalem to help the Jewish people REBUILD their Temple.
The prophet
Ezra tells this story of Cyrus where we read in the Bible “the
LORD stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia to issue a proclamation
throughout his entire kingdom, “Thus says Cyrus, king of Persia: ‘All the
kingdoms of the earth the LORD, the God of heaven, has given to me, and he
has charged me to build him a house in Jerusalem. Let the Jewish people go up to Jerusalem to
build the house of the LORD. Let all the Jewish people be assisted by the people of that
place with silver, gold, goods, and livestock, together with voluntary
offerings for the house of God in Jerusalem.”
This same
King Cyrus is who we hear about in our first reading today. God tells Cyrus “Thus says the LORD to his
anointed, Cyrus, whose right hand I grasp, subduing nations before him, For the sake of my servant Israel, my chosen one,
I have called you by your name, giving you a title, though you knew me not.”
It is
difficult to imagine a more improbable turn of events in the Old Testament than
what King Cyrus did for the Jewish people.
Setting them free, telling them to go home and rebuild their Temple and
then he also wrote letters to all the corners of his vast country that people
from all over the country are to donate gold, silver and livestock for the new Temple!
What is the
takeaway from this…God always wins…and usually the victory comes from the most
unlikely source imaginable…in the case of Cyrus, God works His victory through
a pagan king…
And here is
the point: We look around our world today, torn apart by wars all
around the world, and we see the turmoil even within the Catholic
Church today and we wonder if God has abandoned us.
Let us trust that God is working all things to his purpose even when it appears that we have been abandoned in an earthly way. Let us cling to God, let us put all our hope in His plan, let us stay close to the Sacraments of the Catholic Church even now when the world seems so dark and lost,
As St. Paul assures the Romans: “We know that all things work for the
good for those who love God”.
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