5th
Sunday OT
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Audio File
Job
is not a happy man. He's lost everything. His life is drudgery. He's
a like a slave who works away his days in the sun. All his nights are
troubled. He's soaked in months of misery. Restlessness while trying
to sleep; hopeless while he's awake. He says, “. . .my life is like
the wind; I shall not see happiness again.” We know all too well
why Job is having such a tough time. He's lost everything. His
wealth. His health. His family. All of it. Maybe he could suffer well
under just his material losses, but he's lost one thing that all of
us need most. He's lost his purpose. He's lost his end, his reason
for living. If he had a purpose, he could look forward and place his
losses within a bigger plan to reach that goal. But without a goal,
Job has no way to give his suffering meaning. Jesus has a purpose.
Paul has a purpose. And they know happiness in knowing their purpose.
Ask yourself, “What purpose do I serve? What goal gives my
suffering meaning?”
What's
the point of having a purpose? Isn’t it easier getting out of bed
in the morning knowing you have a purpose, knowing you have a goal to
achieve, a To Do List for your life that needs some work? Isn't it
easier making it to work or class or the next thing on the list
knowing that your attention, energy, labor, and time will be focused
on completing a mission, on getting something done? With the time we
have and the talents we're given, don’t we prefer to see
constructive and profitable outcomes? Even when we’re being a bit
lazy, wasting a little time doing much of nothing, we have it in the
back of our mind to get busy, to get going on something, checking
that next thing on the list and moving toward a goal. It’s how we
are made to live in this world. Not merely to live for a daily To Do
List, but to move toward some sort of perfection, some sort of final
completion.
For
example, Paul writes to the Corinthians: “If I preach the gospel,
this is no reason for me to boast, for an obligation have been
imposed on me, and woe to me if I do not preach it!” Paul is given
a goal, a purpose beyond mere survival, beyond merely getting along.
Having been smacked around by the Lord for persecuting the Church,
Paul finds himself ordered to a regime of holiness, a kingdom of
righteousness, one that demands more than rule-following, more than
simply showing up and breathing in the temple's atmosphere. Paul must
preach. He must travel city to city, province to province, publicly
witnessing to his repentance, to the power of Christ’s mercy
accomplished on the Cross.
Jesus,
exhausted by his purpose, is doing his best to find a little time
away from the crowds. When Simon and other disciples find him and
say, “Everyone is looking for you.” Jesus, pursued, literally, by
his purpose responds responsibly, “Let us go to the nearby villages
that I may preach there also. For
this purpose have I come.”
Soon he will look out over the vast crowd and, moved by compassion,
teach them many things. But now, exhausted himself, he takes his
students out again to preach and teach the Good News. It is his
purpose – to show those hungry for God that God does indeed rule,
that He holds dominion here, over all creation and that healing flows
from faith, light always overcomes darkness, and that evil, no matter
how far ahead in the worldly battles, has already lost war.
Job
has lost his purpose and dwells in an anxious darkness. Paul is
driven by his need to witness. Jesus reveals His Father’s
kingdom—healing, driving out demons, preaching. Job recovers his
purpose when the Lord dramatically reminds him who is God and who is
creature, Who Is Purpose Himself and who has a purpose. Paul runs his
preaching into every town he crosses, proclaiming the Word, setting
up houses of prayer, and leaving behind men and women strong in the
faith. Jesus moves inexorably toward the Cross, his work for the Way
along the way reveals again and again the always, already present
victory of Life over Death, freedom over slavery, final success over
endless failure.
What
is your purpose? You have a given purpose and a chosen
purpose. Your given purpose is built into your flesh, pressed
through into your bones; it is a God-placed hook in your heart, a
hook that tugs you relentlessly back to Him, back to His perfecting
goodness. Your chosen purpose is how you choose to live out
day-to-day your given purpose, how you have figured out how to make
it back to God. Student, mother, professor, virgin, priest, monk,
artist, poet, engineer, athlete, clerk, scientist, father, nurse,
dentist. When your chosen purpose best reveals your given purpose,
when what you have chosen to do helps who you are given to be
flourish, your anxiety finds trust, your sleeplessness finds rest,
your despair finds joy. And you can say with Paul: “All this I do
for the sake of the gospel,” – heal, study, pray, minister,
write, research, teach, drive, build, all this I do for the gospel –
“so that I too may have a share in it.” Everyone is looking for
you. Everyone who has lost their purpose. Everyone who has yet to
hear the Good News that Christ is their purpose. Everyone is looking
for you. Show yourself! And show Christ.