7th
Week of Easter (W)
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell, OP
St.
Dominic Church, NOLA
If
Truth were a commodity—like oil or pork bellies—its stock value
would be very low these days. With the exception of the Church, no
one seems to care much about what's true or false anymore. We are far
more likely to hear that truth is a tool in the oppressor's arsenal;
or that truth is just a traditional fiction dreamed up by neurotics;
or that truth, at best, depends on one's perspective. You have your
truth. I have my truth. Who's to say what's true or false? It just
depends. Rather than ask if a bit of information is true or false,
we're told to ask, “Who benefits from this information? Who's
harmed?” Rather than seek the truth, we are urged to “create a
narrative,” or “build a perception.” When did this sort of
deception creep into our world? Sometime right after God told Adam
and Eve to avoid eating the fruit of one particular tree, the world's
first salesman convinced them that God was lying to them. Several
centuries later, that salesman's political ally asks Jesus, “What
is Truth?” And then washes his hands of Jesus' death. But before he
is arrested and executed, Jesus prays to the Father, “Consecrate
them in the truth. Your word is truth.” Assuming the Father
answered this prayer by fulfilling Jesus' petition, what changed? How
are we different?
When
something is consecrated it is set apart for some special use and
only that use. Chalices are consecrated for use at Mass. Churches are
consecrated for public worship. We don't use a chalice to swig beer
nor do we use a church to host a crawfish boil. When a person is
consecrated something similar happens. That person is set apart for
some special task and only for that task. Monks and nuns come to
mind. They are consecrated to a life of prayer. Dominican friars are
consecrated to a life of preaching. And all baptized Christians are
set apart to give public witness to the Gospel. So when Jesus asks
the Father to consecrate us in the truth, what is he asking? It seems
that he's asking God to set us aside in the truth; that is, to move
us over into the truth in some special way, to preserve us for some
special task that requires that we be in the truth. Now that awful
question rises again, “What is the Truth?” Jesus answers, “Your
word is truth.” God's word is truth. God's promises are truth
itself. All that God has spoken through the Law, the Prophets, and
through the Word made flesh is truth. All that God has revealed to us
through scripture, creation, and His Christ is truth. Jesus is asking
his Father to set us apart to live in His truth while we reside in
the world.
Jesus'
petition for our consecration is bracketed by two statements: “They
do not belong to the world any more than I belong to the world” and
“As you sent me into the world, so I sent them into the world.”
Because we belong to Christ, we cannot belong to the world. However,
Jesus says that he sends us into the world as he himself was sent.
Therefore, we must be consecrated in the truth, set apart in God's
word so that we can bear witness to His mercy in a world that we
don't belong to. Jesus says, “I gave them your word, and the world
hates them. . .” Of course it does! The world loves violence,
spite, revenge, falsehood, and death. God's word shines the glaring
light of truth on the world's most fundamental spiritual darkness:
the pride of a creature who has rejected the rule of its Creator.
We are set apart in God's word to announce the Good News of His
mercy. We are not set apart so that we can pretend to be politically
infallible, or economically incorruptible, or scientifically
inerrant. We are set apart in the death and resurrection of Christ as
that we might be witnesses, givers of testimony to the word we have
received: this world will pass, God's truth will not. His
truth endures forever, and so do all those who receive His truth and
announce His Good News.
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