Homily for Youth: Go Home Justified, Sanctified

By Fr Antony Christy, SDB –

30th Sunday in the Ordinary time – October 27, 2019
Ecclesiasticus 35:12-14,16-19; 2 Timothy 4:6-8,16-18; Luke 18: 9-14

You cannot fill a cup that is full …

God is not partial, God knows no favourites – says the first reading but all the while speaking of a God who takes his stand by the poor, the widow and the orphans, the oppressed and the lowly. No, there is no paradox here, neither is there a partiality. It is natural that water flows where it is low. Isn’t it true, that we can fill only that cup which is empty!

The Word today reminds us of the Spirituality of Emptiness! Emptiness, is not merely an absence of things. Emptiness is not merely a state of something not being there. If it were so, it is so easy to reach that state – all that you need to do is remove whatever is there! Instead, emptiness is a positive reality. Emptiness is where God encounters us!

Emptiness can be due to a lack! The first reading speaks to us of the oppressed, the widows and the orphans… persons who lacked, who lacked their rights, who lacked someone to lean on, who lacked people who cared. The economically poor, those who do not have anyone to call family, those who feel rejected, unaccepted, exploited or abused are people who lack something that is so necessary in life that without it, life becomes hard, meaningless and empty. At those trying moments, if only they raise their hearts a bit, they will realise God is so very close to them. God encounters us in that state… that is a condition!

A condition in which one knows that one lacks, when one knows that he or she is not complete, is when the person encounters God! In our inabilities, in our lacks when we turn to God, and accept God as the one who can fill me… God fills me! At times when we realise the lack – be it what it may, economic or healthwise or with regard to meaning of our life itself – the danger is we get lost in that emptiness, as if that is the end of everything. We forget that emptiness can help. It can help us feel the Lord close by, standing right beside us.

Emptiness can be a lifestyle! One can have things, one can possess goods, but still can decide to live in a state of emptiness, not giving into attachments and bonds that could cripple one’s existence. People who have given up their inherited wealth, people who have turned their backs on what the world would look at as incredible prospects in life… we know quite a lot of them, don’t we? God encounters them there, in that emptiness. That is not a condition, but a choice!

A Choice about which St. Paul speaks of in the second reading, how he had emptied himself for the sake of the Word, for the sake of the Lord, for the sake of the Lord’s people. It is a lifestyle … a mindset… the mindset of Christ: for he did not consider equality with God as something to be held on to,… but emptied himself (Phil 2: 5-7) – the lifestyle of Christ, the Son of God! As long as we seek our sufficiency and our meaning in things and worldly recognitions, we are with our hands full. The moment we choose to let go of them, willingly and purposefully, we would see real serenity emerge. Emptying oneself is a choice to allow God to fill you!

Emptiness is liminality! Liminality is a word that is used to mean, ‘to stand at the threshold’, a state of passage, a state where one has undergone a change from what one was, but has not yet become what one is yet to become! One is not complete yet, but he or she is well on the way to being complete. One is not anymore what he or she was – the old self. But one has not yet fully put on the new self either – but he or she is gradually growing into it – gradually, slowly but steadily, serenely with determination.

We could be reminded here, of the words that St. John writes, ‘We are children of God, what we will be has not yet been revealed. What we know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him, because we will see him as he is’ (1 Jn 3:2). When we empty ourselves, we are moving towards being complete. When we are too conscious of being so complete and perfect, we actually are closing ourselves in and we become dead. The more we empty ourselves; the more God fills us! It is not merely a false self humiliation, but a spiritual surrender of self emptying before the Lord, in which the Lord fills us, to the brim. And thus, we will today go home justified, sanctified, filled with the Lord!

Let us pray:

O God, who alone is complete…
behold my emptiness, and make me ever conscious of it,
that I may be filled, filled by you,
to become complete, just as you are…
Bid me look at you…
so willing to empty yourself,
help me too, to be
so ready to empty myself for the others,
that I may be once again be filled by you, you who alone is complete! Amen


Fr Antony Christy is a Salesian Priest from 2005, who has a Masters in Philosophy (specialisation in Religion) and a Masters in Theology (Specialisation in Catechetics). He is currently pursuing his doctoral research in Theology at Salesian Pontifical University, Rome. Walking with the Young towards a World of Peace and Dialogue is the passion that fires him on.