First Reading
In this remarkable passage from the sage Sirach, God’s call to forgive flows from his commandments and is rooted in our mortality or “last days.” If we forgive others, God will forgive us. Set aside wrath and anger, and God will heal us. We will receive God’s mercy.
Psalm
The psalmist extols the kindness, mercy, and compassion of God. Remember the benefits we receive from God – forgives our sins, heals our ills, saves our life, and is kind and compassionate.
Second Reading
St. Paul reminds us that Christ died and rose from the dead, so he is Lord of both the dead and the living. We do not live or die for ourselves but for the Lord so that, in both life and death, we belong to him.
Gospel
Peter asks Jesus how often he is to forgive his brother, “seven times?” Jesus responds, “not seven times but seventy-seven times.” Jesus tells a parable - the kingdom of heaven is “like a king who decided to settle accounts with his servants.” One servant owed a vast amount and begged for patience. The king, moved with compassion, forgave all of it. Then, this man, found a “fellow servant” who owed him a much smaller amount. He seized him, choked him, and demanded repayment. His fellow servant also begged for patience, but the man refused, and sent him to prison until he paid his debt in full. Deeply disturbed by what the man did to his fellow servant, the other servants went to their king and told him what happened. The king summoned the “wicked servant,” chastised him, and handed him over to the “torturers.” “My heavenly Father,” Jesus says to his disciples, will do the same to you “unless each of you forgives his brother from his heart.”
Notes and Commentary by Don McCrabb, D. Min,
Executive Director of the U.S. Catholic Mission Association
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May God bless you in all the ways you Go Forth…