Gospel: Luke 11: 14-23
It is customary that when something good happens to a person that we rejoice and celebrate the good with that person, and if a good happens to us we invite others to celebrate with us. However, in today's Gospel portion we get the opposite. A man is freed from his demon at the hand of Jesus, but rather than rejoice people bewail the event, and they make irrational assertions against Jesus. The poor man has a good thing happen to him, and no one to rejoice with him.
We might find this scene unusual were it not for the fact that this is the norm in the world of religion. Rather than rejoice in the good work each one is doing and experiencing, instead we find the armies of competing apologists attack one another with endless fury. Instead of focusing on the fundamental work of Jesus in healing, liberating, and nourishing people, instead the focus of religion is on attacking one another in the endless attempt at selling timeshares in pews, in keeping the collection plate full.
Today we are reminded of what is important in the world of religion - to care for others and to rejoice with others when they experience healing, freedom from their demons, nourishment at table. Today is a day to walk away from the pugilism of the apologists, ignoring their invective, and look to the good of the works of mercy to which we are called to undertake in walking authentically with the Lord Jesus on our journey through life.