The texts from the Roman Catholic Lectionary today challenge us to celebrate the transformation to love that we witness when acceptance and forgiveness are part of our journey.
The Reading from the First Letter to Timothy presents Counsel to Timothy.
* [4:11–16] Timothy is urged to preach and teach with confidence, relying on the gifts and the mission that God has bestowed on him.
* [4:12] Youth: some commentators find this reference a sign of pseudepigraphy. Timothy had joined Paul as a missionary already in A.D. 49, some fifteen years before the earliest supposed date of composition.
* [4:13] Reading: the Greek word refers to private or public reading. Here, it probably designates the public reading of scripture in the Christian assembly.
* [4:14] Prophetic word: this may mean the utterance of a Christian prophet designating the candidate or a prayer of blessing accompanying the rite. Imposition of hands: this gesture was used in the Old Testament to signify the transmission of authority from Moses to Joshua (Nm 27:18–23; Dt 34:9). The early Christian community used it as a symbol of installation into an office: the Seven (Acts 6:6) and Paul and Barnabas (Acts 13:3). Of the presbyterate: this would mean that each member of the college of presbyters imposed hands and appears to contradict 2 Tm 1:6, in which Paul says that he imposed hands on Timothy. This latter text, however, does not exclude participation by others in the rite. Some prefer to translate “for the presbyterate,” and thus understand it to designate the office into which Timothy was installed rather than the agents who installed him. (1 Timothy, CHAPTER 4, n.d.)
Psalm 111 tells how God is revealed in Israel’s history.
* [Psalm 111] A Temple singer (Ps 111:1) tells how God is revealed in Israel’s history (Ps 111:2–10). The deeds reveal God’s very self, powerful, merciful, faithful. The poem is an acrostic, each verse beginning with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet. (Psalms, PSALM 111, n.d.)
In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus celebrates the Pardon of the Sinful Woman.
* [7:36–50] In this story of the pardoning of the sinful woman Luke presents two different reactions to the ministry of Jesus. A Pharisee, suspecting Jesus to be a prophet, invites Jesus to a festive banquet in his house, but the Pharisee’s self-righteousness leads to little forgiveness by God and consequently little love shown toward Jesus. The sinful woman, on the other hand, manifests a faith in God (Lk 7:50) that has led her to seek forgiveness for her sins, and because so much was forgiven, she now overwhelms Jesus with her display of love; cf. the similar contrast in attitudes in Lk 18:9–14. The whole episode is a powerful lesson on the relation between forgiveness and love.
* [7:36] Reclined at table: the normal posture of guests at a banquet. Other oriental banquet customs alluded to in this story include the reception by the host with a kiss (Lk 7:45), washing the feet of the guests (Lk 7:44), and the anointing of the guests’ heads (Lk 7:46).
* [7:41] Days’ wages: one denarius is the normal daily wage of a laborer.
* [7:47] Her many sins have been forgiven; hence, she has shown great love: literally, “her many sins have been forgiven, seeing that she has loved much.” That the woman’s sins have been forgiven is attested by the great love she shows toward Jesus. Her love is the consequence of her forgiveness. This is also the meaning demanded by the parable in Lk 7:41–43. (Luke, CHAPTER 7, n.d.)
Cindy Costanzo comments that the Examen came to mind as a wonderful way to reflect on God’s message in Luke 7: 36-50.
The Examen is a wonderful reflective tool used by St. Ignatius and continues to be used by Jesuits and laypeople worldwide. In the daily Examen I pause, relax, and ask God to be with me as I enter God’s presence. The Examen asks me to call to mind 2-3 things I am grateful for in the past 24 hours; where did I see God in the day, in today’s events where did I accept God’s invitation to be loving, grateful and where did I turn away? Where did I stray from God? I call to mind the morning, midday and evening and I reflect on all events and how I responded? What emerges from this reflection for me to focus on? I pause and review the day, remembering what I regret and ask God for forgiveness and the grace to do better. (Costanzo, 2025)
Don Schwager quotes “Jesus the Physician brings miraculous healing to the woman's sins,” by Ephrem the Syrian (306-373 AD).
"Healing the sick is a physician's glory. Our Lord did this to increase the disgrace of the Pharisee, who discredited the glory of our Physician. He worked signs in the streets, worked even greater signs once he entered the Pharisee's house than those that he had worked outside. In the streets, he healed sick bodies, but inside, he healed sick souls. Outside, he had given life to the death of Lazarus. Inside, he gave life to the death of the sinful woman. He restored the living soul to a dead body that it had left, and he drove off the deadly sin from a sinful woman in whom it dwelt. That blind Pharisee, for whom wonders were not enough, discredited the common things he saw because of the wondrous things he failed to see." (excerpt from HOMILY ON OUR LORD 42.2) (Schwager, n.d.)
The Word Among Us Meditation on Luke 7:36-50 asserts that the woman’s sins were great; we should never minimize them. But the love and forgiveness that Jesus had for her were even greater. Gratefully, she received this generous gift and responded with her own generosity. She wasn’t trying to pay Jesus back, and she wasn’t trying to earn future kindness from him. She was just thankful for the fresh start, and the abundant joy she felt overflowed in acts of love.
This woman’s story is your story as well. Jesus is offering you the same gift of forgiveness that he gave her. It’s the very reason why he died and rose again. So don’t let your past define you. Don’t settle for feeling weighed down by your sins, not even your worst sins. Not even the sins that you have kept hidden away for years. Come to him, confess your sins, and let him set you free.
“Jesus, I am amazed at the depths of your mercy! What else can I do but worship you with my whole heart?” (Meditation on Luke 7:36-50, n.d.)
Friar Jude Winkler comments the passage from 1 Timothy is a personal message as if written by Paul. In ancient times, Wisdom was associated with great age. When Daniel reveals the truth concerning “Susanna” and Timothy is urged to give examples of love, truth, and faith we have younger persons. The committee of elders “the presbyterate” and in some communities the Bishops presided over an early form of ordination by laying on of hands to invoke the Spirit. In Luke a sinful woman comes and anoints Jesus and the Pharisee cautions He should not allow her to touch Him. He permits anointment because He knows her forgiven sins. The larger debt of her forgiveness is appropriate to her gratitude. In this miracle is an account of physical and spiritual healing. The characterization of this woman in Luke as Mary Magdalen is not true. Friar Jude notes that, in Luke, Jesus is reaching out to the anawim, the physically and spiritually poor.
Father Richard Rohr, OFM, notes The Tears of Things Reader’s Guide and introduces Buddhist teacher and environmental activist Joanna Macy (1929–2025) who identifies four stages of work that support our ongoing participation in the healing of the world.
The spiral of the Work That Reconnects maps out an empowerment process that journeys through four successive movements, or stations: coming from gratitude, honoring our pain for the world, seeing with new eyes, and going forth. This spiral … reminds us that we are larger, stronger, deeper, and more creative than we’ve grown accustomed to believing. When we come from gratitude, we become more present to the wonder of being alive in this amazing world, to the many gifts we receive, to the beauty and mystery it offers. Yet the very act of looking at what we love and value in our world brings with it an awareness of the vast violation underway, the despoliation and unraveling….
From gratitude we naturally flow to honoring our pain for the world. Dedicating time and attention to honoring this pain opens up space to hear our sorrow, fear, outrage, and other felt responses to what is happening to our world…. Our pain for the world not only alerts us to danger but also reveals our profound caring. And this caring derives from our interconnectedness with all of life. We need not fear it. (Rohr, n.d.)
We ponder the power of gratitude that surfaces as we reflect on our blessings and the journey to full life that we experience as disciples of Christ.
References
Costanzo, C. (2025, September 18). Daily Reflection September 18, 2025 | Creighton Online Ministries. Creighton Online Ministries. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://onlineministries.creighton.edu/daily-reflections/daily-reflection-september-18-2025
Luke, CHAPTER 7. (n.d.). USCCB. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://bible.usccb.org/bible/luke/7?36
Meditation on Luke 7:36-50. (n.d.). Word Among Us Homepage. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://wau.org/meditations/2025/09/18/1385012/
1 Timothy, CHAPTER 4. (n.d.). USCCB. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://bible.usccb.org/bible/1timothy/4?12
Psalms, PSALM 111. (n.d.). USCCB. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://bible.usccb.org/bible/psalms/111?
Rohr, R. (n.d.). Daily Meditations — Center for Action and Contemplation. CAC.org. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://cac.org/daily-meditations/the-work-of-grief-and-love/
Schwager, D. (n.d.). Which Will Love Him More? Daily Scripture Readings and Meditations – Daily Scripture Readings and Meditations. Retrieved September 18, 2025, from https://www.dailyscripture.net/daily-meditation/?ds_year=2025&date=sep18