Jealousy
- as Britain’s Queen Alexandra famously said in 1910 - is the source of so many
problems in life.
Well,
you hardly need me to tell you that – or that there is plenty of jealousy in the
world, or what its causes are. Evidently, there was plenty of it in the Gospel
story we just heard [Mark
9:38-43, 47-48] – as illustrated
by the apostles’ angry reaction to the unnamed “someone” they had caught
casting out devils in Jesus’ name – as well as in the Old Testament story of
Joshua’s jealous reaction to Eldad and Medad prophesying in the camp [Numbers
11:25-29]. I think we can
all recognize some of ourselves in the behavior of both Joshua and Jesus’ apostles
– the first Bishops of the Church. Jesus’ startling response – like that of
Moses before him – seems to go against what we should all recognize as one of
our most ordinary and deeply embedded patterns of human behavior, being part of
a group.
As
we have been hearing now for the past several Sundays, Jesus had, for some time
now, been instructing his followers about what was going to happen when they
got to Jerusalem – and what that experience should translate into in terms of
their own attitudes. Yet the impression one gets over and over again – in the
Gospels as in ordinary life, when things get repeated over and over, there is
usually a reason, an instructional purpose – the impression one gets is that
the future first Bishops of Jesus’ Church just didn’t get it. On the contrary,
we see them again focused on themselves, on being insiders, on being important
members of a prestigious and powerful inner circle!
Like
members of any adolescent prep-school clique, college fraternity, or any other
exclusive group at any age, the apostles seemed obsessed with distinguishing
who’s in from who’s out, who’s up from who’s down, who’s rich from who’s poor,
who’s smart from who’s dumb, who dresses well from who doesn’t, who’s cool from
who’s not - and equally obsessed with having it all without having to sacrifice
anything, let alone a hand, a foot, or an eye. That sounds a lot like us, like
our American society today, doesn’t it?
Of
course, in the world we human beings have built for ourselves, our world works
best by building barriers, something we are forever doing at every level. That
is who we are. It expresses what we want and determines how we act – in our families,
in our relationships, in our careers, in our country, in our churches,
whatever.
The
good news of the Gospel is that by his life - and above all by his death –
Jesus has liberated us from this deep-seated, but ultimately enslaving and
self-destructive, need to be forever comparing ourselves, to be forever in
competition, to be forever keeping score, counting our possessions and
calculating our coolness. Jesus challenges us to free ourselves from this
unending universal human obsession about ourselves, and about our group, which
is just a collective version of our obsession about ourselves.
And,
of course, all those things that we want so much all come in limited
quantities. That presumably is a big part of their appeal, what makes them so
attractive and desirable. To the extent that I get a lot, someone else gets
less, little, or nothing at all. That is the heart of our economic and
political life, which is why economic and political life are so largely about
conflict, because the reality is that there really is never enough of all the
stuff we want – certainly not enough for everyone! And, as today’s 2nd Reading [James
5:1-6] reminds us, those at
the top of the economic pyramid tend to try to guarantee that it stays that
way. So the perennial task of economic
systems and governments is to figure out how most satisfactorily to allocate
all those scarce, limited benefits that we all so desire, which can only work
when people are willing to limit their desires and allow others to get their
share.
The
kingdom of God, however, has no such limits. It has room enough for all of us.
It’s the ultimate (and perhaps the only) genuinely “win-win” situation. But it
also entails a completely novel and completely unique notion of what winning
means, enabling us to accomplish mighty deeds in God’s name, transforming our
“lose-lose” world into something we would otherwise never have been able even
to imagine.
Like
the apostles, our natural inclination is to spend our energy vainly competing
to accumulate more and more – tangible goods like wealth, power, security, and
status, and those equally elusive if less tangible ones like affirmation,
respect, and love. Jesus, however, is challenging us, as he challenged his
apostles (and as only he can), to feel, to walk, and to see our way through
life with his hands, his feet, and his eyes – and so to
feel, to walk, and to see things the way God does.
Homily for the 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, September 30, 2018.