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By Msgr. Jerry Hardy
Choosing To Take A Chance
Theres nothing we like better than a neat deal
signed, sealed, delivered, all under control. What gets to us is the
uncooperative/unexpected/disruptive/non-productive circumstance/person.
Todays gospel should therefore hit home with us, because it talks about
handling that person or circumstances by taking a chance, another chance, even
if you have already taken one before.
The gardener chooses to risk his energy and labor on a tree that
is just not producing. Dont give up on it, he says, Let
me have another shot at it.
So many times Jesus has had to say the same thing to our Father
about us. And he keeps giving us another year to produce, to grow, to outgrow.
His patience is aimed at our producing.
Like every gift, this one of another chance is to be
given away. If he has said about us Dont give up on them,
then he expects us, in turn, not to give up either. Its as if he were
saying to us, Dont give up on yourself, the kids, the
establishment, the marriage, the Church, the relationship
give me a
chance to do something more with it, through you, with you, in you
Implications For Us
1. The willingness to take a chance on a person is also called
simply trust. The way anyone of us becomes trustworthy is by having
people trust us and find us, in the process, worthy of that trust. Its an
empowering risk. It is also a responsibility we have toward each other: to help
each other grow by believing each other can, by choosing to support that
can with a chance. Very important with children, especially when
weve just had to correct them.
2. Taking chances on people involves taking chances on
relationships and institutions. Take a look at some of these that youve
given up on and see if another chance isnt called for. |