Room for God in Europe?
Readings: Genesis 37:3-4, 12-13, 17-28; Ps 104:16-21; Matthew 21:33-43, 45-46
Today’s Gospel narrates the parable of the landowner who, deciding to go off abroad, leased his vineyard to tenants. The tenants were given the freedom to look after the vineyard as best they could. However, they soon viewed the vineyard as their own property and set about attacking the representatives of the landowner when they arrived to claim his due. Jesus warns his listeners that those who pay no heed to the landowner risk being stripped of the gift with which they have been entrusted.
Today, more than ever, we need to learn that this world is a gift from God given to us for a while that we might attend it with care. In contrast to much of today’s political and economic agenda, which seems obsessed with ideas of progress and competition, we need to remind ourselves that life is not about the survival of the fittest. Rather, each person, created in God’s image, has a dignity that needs to be defended from the very beginning of life to its very end. So whether or not God gets a mention in the European constitution or other documents of that kind, it is important that there are still people prepared to risk everything and go out into the vineyard to preach the truths of our faith.