Gospel: Luke 13: 31-35
In Jesus' day, not unlike our own, people were obsessed with the political question of power and control. Roman occupation was hard, and various groups had different and competing positions on it. Herodians supported Roman rule; Pharisees opposed it through adherence to the law; the Zealots advocated for violent revolution; the Essenes withdrew from society and awaited the Messiah who would restore the kingdom of Israel.
But in all of this the Temple became abandoned - not by God but by us. And not the Temple in Jerusalem but the one God created - the human person in which God dwells. We fail to cultivate our souls wherein God abides. We fail to acknowledge God present in the temple of each human person. We fail to love neighbor; we fail to love our enemies. Instead, we vilify others and demonize them. We fail to live the life of mercy to which we are called.
So we abandon the Temple. We are unable to be gathered together by the Lord because of our hatreds toward others. We are left, then, with only one alternative - destruction at our own hands, just as it was for the people in Jesus' day. Jesus showed us the way in setting aside the easy life, the wiles of food, power, and influence offered him in the desert in order to live a life of simplicity, love and service. The Way of Jesus is the only way of peace, the only way to the kingdom of God.