Sunday Gospel Reflections
          October 26, 2025 Cycle C
            Luke 18:9-14
              
          Reprinted
by
              permission of the “Arlington Catholic Herald”
Humble Mercy
          by Fr.
            Joseph M. Rampino
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In a deeply insightful
          moment, the
          titular hero of G.K. Chesterton’s “Father Brown” mystery
          series reveals the
          secret of his powers of deduction to his friend, the former
          thief Flambeau.
The sleuth-priest says
          that he can
          figure out the likely actions and motives of the various
          criminals they come
          across because he knows that he himself is a sinner. “I have
          done each of these
          things myself,” he says, not in the sense that he has actually
          carried out a
          whole series of robberies and murders, but rather because he
          knows that those
          things leading to wicked deeds, namely, pride, vanity, greed,
          anger, envy,
          desperation, discouragement, and all the rest, are in his
          heart just as much as
          in the hearts of those whom he investigates. He continues,
          saying to his
          friend, “No man’s really any good till he knows how bad he is,
          or might be.”
This is precisely the
          difference
          between the two characters in the example Christ gives us in
          the weekend’s
          Gospel. The Pharisee may in fact have some virtues, behaving
          well for the most
          part in his own life, but he holds on to his pride, and so
          cannot receive mercy
          from God. The tax collector, on the other hand, whatever
          strengths or
          weaknesses he might have, confesses only his humble need for
          forgiveness, and
          so can receive the good gifts of God’s pardon. Christ teaches
          us that whatever
          else might be present in our moral lives, only pride, the
          worst of all sins,
          keeps us from mercy. This should not surprise us, since pride
          touched with envy
          is the great, and perhaps even the only, sin of the devil. The
          devil, as an
          angel and a spiritual being, is not lustful, gluttonous,
          greedy, wrathful or
          slothful; he is simply envious of God’s kingship, and proud of
          his power,
          entranced by the idea of autonomy. This alone suffices to
          produce in him a
          bitter hatred for all things.
So then, Christ’s
          example prompts in us
          a choice: will we stand on pride and autonomy, or will we,
          mindful of our
          failings, open up in humility to the one who loves us with
          mercy? We all face
          the temptation to build ourselves up, to assure ourselves that
          we are good
          people, that whatever our sins are, we are not as bad as the
          real criminals,
          the real sinners, those whom we perceive as monsters. As much
          as there might be
          truth in that fact, that we might not ourselves be murderers
          and great thieves
          of the sort that literary detectives like Father Brown are
          wont to pursue and
          catch, we are so by only God’s mercy working in our freedom.
          We gain nothing
          from giving in to this temptation to stand on our virtues, and
          by choosing
          pride, we close ourselves off to the influence of grace and
          the touch of God in
          our hearts.
And in the end,
          becoming perfect people
          is not the point of Christianity. The point of Christianity is
          union with the
          good God. If we become perfect but close ourselves off to the
          God who loves us,
          we have lost everything of worth. If we face up to our
          failings in humility,
          like the tax collector in Jesus’ story, we can receive the
          mercy of God who
          loves us even when we are sinners. If we let this forgiving
          define us and our
          worth, then we will not only find it easier to grow into
          perfection anyways,
          but we will become free to love the other, God and neighbor,
          and so begin to
          taste the life of heaven even now.