In the first reading we see Abraham “bargaining” with God to save Sodom from destruction for their evil deeds: “Will you really let the just perish with the wicked?” “Perhaps there are fifty good people in the town. Would you not spare the place for the sake of these fifty righteous people?” Abraham pleaded with God to spare Sodom for even less good people and God agreed, “For the sake of ten good people, I will not destroy Sodom.”
There were not ten good people and Sodom was destroyed.
How often are we like Abraham trying to “bargain” with God? Such bargaining is not bad: it shows close familiarity and trust in God.
In the Gospel reading we hear from Jesus what following him entails. We Christians pray, proclaiming to all, that we “will follow the Lord wherever he goes.”
In our daily life, do we really do so? Don’t we usually tell our Lord, “I need to work as I have a deadline to meet or I need to rush to buy stuff in the supermarket or the mall because of the one-day sale, or fix the car, or relax in the beach, etc. and then I will pray! By that time, we are tired and spent and ready to sleep out. Doesn’t it seem like we are allocating our lowest energy time to our Lord, thus putting him at lowest priority, he who created us and sustains us?
Jesus’ statement that the “Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head” emphasizes our imbalance of values or priorities. He keeps knocking into each person’s heart for a place to reside and many times we simply choose to ignore him, and prefer to pursue our day-to-day routines and tasks and to attend instead to our mundane needs.