Reflection for Thursday, August 14, 2003: 19th week in Ordinary Time.

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Hamm, Dennis, S.J.

Issue Date

2003-08-14

Volume

Issue

Type

Essay

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Most of us know the story of Father Kolbe, the German-Polish Franciscan priest who literally turned his life over for another in Auschwitz. It was in the early days of the Nazi death camp, 1941. The 47-year-old friar had been arrested and placed among the laboring prisoners of Auschwitz. One of the prisoners had made a successful escape and the Nazi guards had arbitrarily selected 20 prisoners who would pay for that escape with their lives. One of those selected, 40-year-old Francis Gajowniczek, broke down and screamed, "What will happen to my family?" At that point Kolbe stepped forward and asked the guards to kill him instead, reasoning that it would better serve their purposes to kill an older, sickly man than a younger, fitter one. They took him up on it. A shot of carbolic acid in a vein of his arm exploded his heart in moments. Gajowniczek survived the camp and went on to live 54 more years. At the time Kolbe was killed in his place, Gajowniczek had a bad case of tuberculosis of the spine. His spectacular cure from that infirmity is one of the miracles that were adduced in the cause of Kolbe's canonization.|| A few years ago, I found myself among a group of Jesuits visiting Auschwitz in the company of an American rabbi. We were standing next to the cellblock that had housed Father Kolbe, and a young Polish woman was telling us his story. The rabbi interjected, "I'm sorry but I have to remind you that Maximillion Kolbe published a magazine that carried virulent anti-Semitic material." The woman stood her ground, looked the rabbi in the eye steadily, and said, "People change."| Does any of this relate to today's Gospel reading, the parable of the Unforgiving Servant? I have no way of knowing if the woman's words helped the rabbi forgive Kolbe or if the woman was able to forgive the rabbi's disturbing interjection, but I have no trouble believing that Kolbe forgave his captors and killers. His explicit imitation of Jesus makes that evident.| The "numbers game" that occurs in this parable is worth our attention. Peter had asked, "How many times must I forgive? As much as seven times?" As if to mock his how-far-do-I-have-go approach, Jesus says, "Seventy times seven"-or 490 times, to be exact. But of course exactness was exactly not the point here. Jesus multiplies the perfect number 7 by 70 as if to say "endlessly, limitlessly." Then he drives his point home with the story of a man who owes the impossible sum of 10,000 talents. Since our lexicons tell us that a talent was a huge weight of silver worth around 10,000 denarii, and a denarius was worth a day's labor, we are talking a debt of 100,000,000 days' labor. The man begs for the debt to be forgiven, and by God he gets his request. No sooner does he experience this immense forgiveness of debt than he encounters a co-worker who owes him a mere 100 denarii-one millionth of what he has just been forgiven! And the forgiven servant has the gall to demand immediate repayment of that pittance. No one can miss the irony. Having been immensely forgiven by the Lord, we are asked to forgive others in the same spirit.|If Kolbe could muster it, so can we, with God's help.

Description

Citation

Publisher

University Ministry, Creighton University.

License

These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

Lectionary number: 416

ISSN

EISSN