10/26/25 - 9:30 Sunday Mass | Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Devotional

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Bible Study Guide

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Are you a friend of God? I think Yeah, that's good. Amen. I think many of us who struggle with sin can question this. Discouraged as we fail time after time, falling into the same sin. We might wonder, "Do I truly desire God's friendship? Because surely if I did, I would not be falling into sin so often. Am I really a friend of God? Well, in today's gospel, we have a story of friendship with God. [00:47:13]

But there is one friendship here. Which one is the friend of God? And answering this comes from understanding what friendship is. Because friendship must have mutual relationship as its basis. And of these two figures, only one of them had this two-way relationship. And the way that we can tap into this relationship is through hope. [00:48:09]

Just as when a man falls in love with a woman at first sight and at that first sight hopes to have her and thus begins the seed of that friendship. So must your hope be for God. [00:48:38]

Hope in God is your ticket to friendship with God. To see this, let's first look at the Pharisee in the parable we just heard. It's important first of all to know that the Pharisees in the time of Jesus were really the good guys. We have this imagination of them being kind of all wicked people, but actually they were considered the good guys in a time of great corruption about them. [00:48:56]

The Pharisees were the ones who were zealous for the Torah. They understood that the law was the means by which the Jew manifests his love for God. But in this story, this apparently holy Pharisee undermines that holiness by attributing it to himself. [00:49:21]

As we listen to the parable, we hear that he takes up his position into the temple, a hint at his sort of pride and self-worth. It further says the Pharisee said the prayer to himself and this is what the prayer was. Oh God, I thank you that I am not like the rest of humanity, greedy, dishonest, adulterous or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week. I pay tithes on my whole income. [00:49:44]

Now what's wrong here? What's wrong is that this is not a prayer. It's a boast. He did not truly desire friendship with God because he thought he didn't need it. Seeing all the good things in his life, he falsely attributes them to himself rather than to God. [00:50:18]

He hoped in himself rather than in God and thus hindered the source of that goodness from God that God was offering him in that friendship. [00:50:43]

In those days tax collectors were really the bad guys. They cooperated with the unjust laws and practices of the Roman Empire. They were the means of a lot of suffering for a lot of very innocent people and were rightly identified as traitors to the Jewish state. But look at the stark difference between the Pharisee and this great sinner, the tax collector. [00:51:03]

Acknowledging his unworthiness, he does not even dare to raise up his eyes nor enter the temple. And then he says these key words that express something deep within him. Oh God, be merciful to me a sinner. [00:51:41]

What was this plea? Where did this plea come from? It came came from that deep desire that the Pharisee had within him. That divine holy theological hope, the desire for the eternal good of God, knowing that God could save him from his sin. [00:52:05]

God planted in the tax collector that desire for him. And that tax collector realized that despite his sinfulness, despite the punishment he merited for his sin, he still had access to that friendship with God in his infinite mercy. [00:52:32]

While the Pharisee in his self-import could not see this, the tax collector realizing his lack and the ability for God to save him reaches out to God for mercy. And that prayer transformed. From that moment, friendship was rekindled because God refuses his friendship to no one who hopes in him. [00:52:45]

Through hope, the tax collector opened the way for relationship with God. Brothers and sisters, you are all sinners and so am I. Often, especially when we struggle with habitual sins, we can be tempted to give up, which often leads us to complacency or to binge in our sin or never seek his mercy and thereby fall deeper and deeper and deeper into it. This is despair. This kills the soul. [00:53:20]

What Christ is teaching us in this gospel is that we must never let our sins destroy our hope in him. Because that hope in him is our key to a restored friendship with him. [00:53:41]

Whether you are the prideful Pharisee or the greedy tax collector, by expressing these simple words with sincerity, "Oh God, be merciful to me a sinner," you open up a channel by which God can recreate charity in your soul, activated by that friendship. [00:53:57]

This is vital to understand. You are not God's friend because you are good. Rather, you are good because you were first God's friend. And that friendship is activated by hope. So never let your friendship with your God be faded by your sins. Hope in him and experience his loving friendship. [00:54:36]

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