29th Week OT(F)
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
There's
a Facebook meme that reads: “Remember—when someone asks, 'What
Would Jesus Do?' Freaking out and throwing tables is a viable
option.” The meme has a line drawing of Jesus. . .freaking out and
throwing tables. When we wonder whether or not anger is an acceptable
Christian response, we think of Jesus in the temple courtyard,
thrashing the moneychangers. What gospel scene do we imagine when we
wonder about the acceptability of feeling and showing frustration and
impatience? May I suggest this morning's gospel? Jesus accuses the
crowds of hypocrisy b/c they continue to hesitate in accepting the
truth right in front of their faces. They can read the signs of an
impending storm. And they can read the signs for a warm, sunny day.
So why can't they see that he's come to fulfill the Law and free them
all from sin? Just a few verses before today's reading, we read Jesus
saying, “I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it
were already blazing!” Impatient? Frustrated? Well, what would
Jesus do? He'd set the world on fire.
Lest
you think Jesus is threatening an actual conflagration, let me
quickly point out what he says immediately after this, “There is a
baptism with which I must be baptized, and how great is my anguish
until it is accomplished!” Baptism here refers to his
sacrificial death on the cross, the sacrifice that must occur before
the world can set ablaze with the Holy Spirit. If his reference is a
little obscure, his feelings on the issue aren't. He's frustrated,
impatient. And the dumbstruck crowd milling around him isn't helping
matters much. Keep in mind: he's anxious to be about the business for
which he was sent—our salvation. So the reluctance of those who
listen to him to accept their own redemption must be extremely
aggravating. As understandable as his frustration might be, why does
he accuse these poor people of hypocrisy? When they see a cloud in
the west, they know it's going to rain, so they scramble to prepare
for a storm. They see the sign and act on it. Here he is—a living,
breathing sign of the Father's mercy—and most of them just stand
there gawking at him. A few want more evidence. Some even demand
miracles. Fortunately, there were no tables or moneychangers in the
crowd that day! And that Jesus left his whip with Mother Mary.
New
Orleans is populated by hurricane experts. We know how to interpret
the weather in the Gulf, but do we know how to interpret the present
time? We do, even if we sometimes forget that we do. Here's a
reminder. The present time is a godly gift. Call it a Saptio-temporal
Gift, the divine gift of space and time in which we always live and
thrive. As a gift, the present time—right now—is the only moment
we have to acknowledge our total dependence on God and give Him
thanks for giving us life and keeping us alive. Every second we are
alive affords us the opportunity to renew and reinforce our gratitude
to God; every second we're alive grants us the chance to receive His
mercy and grow in holiness; every second we're alive Christ dares us
to set this world on fire with his Good News. We can interpret the
present time b/c for us (as followers of Christ) the past, present,
and future all come together in one explosive moment of all-consuming
grace: the doors of heaven are slammed open, and we are set on fire
by the glory of God's love for us. One Lord, one faith, one baptism;
one God and Father of all, who is over all, and through all, and in
all. What would Jesus do? He would die so that we all might live.
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