I
don’t know about you, but there are times when I really wish the Gospels
included a lot more personal information about Jesus’ disciples. Today [Mark 9:30-37], for example, wouldn’t it be interesting to be able
to listen in on the disciples’ conversation en route to Capernaum? I can
picture Peter, perhaps still stung by Jesus’ rebuke in last week’s
Gospel, reminding the others that he was still in line for the top job!
I can almost hear Andrew answer, “OK, brother, but don’t forget that I
met him first, and I introduced you to him!” And John chiming in, “but
I’m the one he’s closest to!” And, of course, Judas, “I’m the one he
trusts with the money, without me where would you all be!”
Of
course, the Gospel only hints at all that. It tells us that when Jesus asked
what they had been arguing about, they were suddenly (and suspiciously)
tongue-tied. And Jesus, ever the teacher, took the opportunity to teach them a
lesson.
Actually,
this was the second time Jesus had tried to teach them what lay ahead. But they
failed to understand. In a world without
power-point presentations and other such gimmicks, Jesus employed a child as
his instructional aide.
Children
induce all sorts of reactions in people. A baby is a sure attention-grabber in
any gathering. In our society, children are considered cute, innocent
individuals, to whom we are expected to react positively and benevolently.
Forty-one
years ago, as a City College undergrad in New York, I had a work-study job
which one day involved my attending a meeting at a Head Start facility on the
Lower East Side, in what would then have been a very depressed neighborhood.
One of the pre-school kids showed up as usual, not knowing that the place was
closed that day, prompting someone to comment. “That’s a smart kid! He knows
he’s better off here than at home!” How smart or not he was I can’t say, but
what I took away from that was that, smart or not, he was still just a child
and so was dependent on adults’ schedules – dependent and hence powerless. His
powerlessness was in part the powerlessness of the poor, of course; but being a
child made his powerlessness that much more so. Even rich children, after all,
are ultimately dependent on someone else to exercise power on their
behalf.
Yet
when Jesus wanted to teach his disciples what following him is all about, he pointed
to a powerless child. Thus he sought to teach his clueless disciples the
paradox of the powerless Christ, who, in obedience to his Father, assumed our
ordinariness as his own to meet us where we are at our most powerless – in the
darkness of death, where all our obsessive human preoccupation with power and
status, our aspiration to greatness and accomplishment, all come to nothing.
No
wonder they found him hard to understand! It seems being a disciple means more
than merely listening to Jesus’ words and possibly preaching them to others.
No, it means being led, by him and with him, where he was led. It means leaving
behind our perpetual preoccupation with power and status, our aspiration to
greatness and accomplishment, our competitiveness with one another and within
our own selves - the passions that today’s 2nd reading [James 3:16-4:3] so strongly warns us
about, causing us to covet but not possess, to envy but not obtain, to ask but
not receive. From middle and high school popularity contests to our national
campaigns, it’s all about who’s up and who’s down, who’s in and who’s out.
In
contrast, Jesus challenges us to come to know Christ with the powerless,
dependent transparency of a child – a child who knows he or she is better off
in here with Jesus than out there on one’s own.
Good
teacher that he was, Jesus did not try totally to demolish the ambition of his
disciples. Instead he gave them a new definition of greatness to aspire to. “If anyone wishes to be first, he shall be
the last of all and the servant of all.”
That
can be quite frightening, even threatening. Certainly, it scared the disciples.
And it scares most of us most of the time, which is why we tend to pass over it
as quickly as possible in search of some more “upbeat” message. But ultimately
this is the challenge of a Christian life – of all Christians from first to last.
In
a couple of weeks, the Church will observe a Year of Faith, beginning on the 50th
anniversary of the opening of the 2nd Vatican Council by Blessed
Pope John XXIII. A few years earlier, on the day of his coronation as Pope, as
he was being carried aloft for the first time on his portable throne, the sedia gestatoria, Pope John is supposed to have commented,
“The secret of everything is to let oneself be carried by God, and so to carry
God to others.”
Homily for the 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, September 23, 2012
Homily for the 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, September 23, 2012
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