Liturgy&Music

Twenty-eighth Sunday of Ordinary Time/CSunday of Ordinary Time/C

Massimo Palombella

unknown, Jesus heals the leper (Duomo di Monreale, Palermo)

In today’s Gospel (Lk 17:11-19), as last Sunday, Jesus returns to the theme of faith, that is, the relationship of each of us with the true God.

In the story of the ten lepers healed and only one who goes back – the Samaritan – to thank Jesus, there is the crystal clear image of our relationship with God. In fact, in a logic of a God “invented” and “used” to make us well, the ten lepers are simply feel ok. In this logic, a “relationship” is not important but only “using” an invented god – or the people around us – to get what we want. It is a subtle and often imperceptible, but equally ruthless logic where everything is subservient to the achievement of our goals, and where, after all, there is no “trust”, and life is consumed in a sort of “bubble” where everything is absolutely and solely defined by us, including God.

The salvation produced by the faith of the one leper who returns to thank Jesus is precisely getting out of the aforementioned “bubble”, out of an invented world, not real, to begin to relate, to recognise reality, to invest our best energies not in defending ourselves and fighting to pursue our goals, but in living in abundance, in fullness.

The true God waits for us outside the “bubble” we repeatedly construct, waits for us without our nevrotic certainties, waits for us with our fears, with our lack of resolve to love us in reality, for what we really are, to offer us the true relationship with Him that is the only thing that allows our life to become worth living.

The communion antiphon for today’s celebration is taken from Psalm 118 (Ps 118:22, 24) with the following text:
Aufer a me opprobrium et contemptum, quia mandata tua exquisivi, Domine:
nam et testimonia tua meditatio mea est.

(Remove from me all scorn and contempt, for I have kept your commandments;
for your law is the object of my meditations).

The attached music, in Gregorian chant, is taken from the Graduale Triplex published in Solesmes in 1979. The polyphonic verse that alternates with the Gregorian chant antiphon is my own composition. The interpretation is by the “Pontifical Sistine Chapel Choir” at the Papal Celebration on 14 October 2018.

A blessed Sunday and heartfelt greetings.