3rd Sunday of
Lent (2015)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
How
many here have been to a flea market? I went to one for the first
time in the early 80's with my paternal grandmother. We drove to
Belzoni, MS to the annual Catfish Festival. We had a carload of her
crafts to sell—ceramics, painting, knitting. Every item had a small
white price sticker. But I learned that that sticker was just a
suggestion, the opening bid for the item. Through the day, I watched
my grandmother dicker over the prices. Sometimes she came out on top
and sometimes she didn't. When the catfish frying started, I wandered
around the stalls to see what I could see. It didn't take me long to
find the comic book booths. All those wadded up dollar bills in my
pocket—all ten of them—started burning and itching to be spent. I
returned to my grandmother's booth with a handful of comics and
nothing left in my pocket. That day I learned two rules about
bargaining for what you want: 1). always assume that the price is too
high; 2). be prepared to walk away. Since then, I've learned another
rule of the marketplace: some things are too valuable to negotiate
over. Jesus clearly demonstrates that there is no place for the
marketplace in the business of faith. Our faith is priceless and God
never bargains.
Jesus
is angry, very angry. He's angry enough to take a whip to the money
changers doing business in the temple courtyard. It might not be
obvious why he's so angry, so let's look at that for a moment. The
money changers have a job to do. They are the first century
equivalent of our modern currency exchanges. They take a wide variety
of currency and change it—for a fee—into currency acceptable to
the temple. The faithful visiting the temple then use their new
currency to buy sacrificial animals or donate their tithe to the
temple coffers. Seems innocent enough, so why does this practical
business upset Jesus? He shouts at the money changers, “Take these
out of here, and stop making my Father's house a marketplace.” He's
angry b/c these businessmen have turned his Father's house into a
marketplace. OK. But why would that make him angry? The money
changers are helping the faithful fulfill their legal and ritual
obligations. . .for a modest profit, of course. Without the money
changers, most probably wouldn't be able to offer the required
sacrifices or make their tithe donations. They are providing an
invaluable service. If CCN or the NYT had been around in those days,
the headlines would've read: CHRISTIAN TERRORIST TRASHES TEMPLE! Or
something equally inflammatory. Is Jesus just being unreasonable
here? Is he pushing an extremist agenda? No. Jesus knows that what
his Father truly wants, truly values is the sacrifice of a contrite
heart. The money changers have turned a deeply religious duty into a
flea market negotiation.
Taken
on its own, there's nothing inherently wrong with the marketplace. We
buy what we want and need; sell what we can no longer use; and trade
one thing for another based on mutual agreement. Nothing could be
more democratic or fair. No one is forced to buy, sell, or trade and
prices are set only after both parties are satisfied. But there are
some things so valuable that they cannot be priced, cannot be bought,
sold, or traded. There are some things that have worth beyond our
ability to negotiate them away. One of those things is our faith, the
infused habit of trusting in the loving-care of our Father. How much
is the freely given gift of faith worth? What would you trade it for?
What amount of money could you spend to buy a gift given only by God?
Jesus is angry at the money changers because they have turned the
faithfuls' love for God, their worship, their adoration into a
mercantile exchange, a mechanical transaction from which they benefit
by charging a fee. Where is the faithfuls' contrite heart? Where is
the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving? Where is repentance, mercy,
and the longing for holiness? Do they believe that the their worship
of the Most High is accomplished by jingling a few coins? That their
duty to revere the Creator is discharged by slipping a quarter or two
into a temple vending machine? Apparently, they do and that's why
Jesus grabs a whip, flips over their booths, and drives them out of
his Father's house.
Now,
what does this raucous gospel episode have to do with us? While Jesus
rested in Jerusalem, many came to believe in his name. However, John
reports, “Jesus would not trust himself to them because he knew
them all, and did not need anyone to testify about human nature. He
himself understood it well.” Jesus understands the human heart, its
strengths, weaknesses, temptations, and failures. He understands that
we are often all too ready, willing, and able to overthrow his Father
as Lord of our lives and negotiate away the gift of faith. He
understands that we are often tempted to allow the demons of fear and
worry to set up shop among the better spirits of joy and trust. That
we love a good deal and often fail to see beyond the next bargain,
beyond the next chance to get something we want. Jesus hesitates to
reveal himself to those who have come to believe on his name b/c he
knows that it is our nature to take the easiest path, to lift the
lightest burden, and to make the most popular choice. He will not
give his revelation to a heart prepared to swap it for money, power,
celebrity, or approval. He's waiting to reveal himself to those who
will sacrifice a heart made contrite in repentance, a heart made pure
by honestly discharging its duty to love. The freely given gift of
faith cannot be bought, sold, or traded; it cannot be negotiated away
or bargained for. It can only be nurtured and lived, or left to
wither and die.
During
the next few years, the heart of the faithful in the U.S. will be
tested by a variety of money changers seeking to buy the faith
outright or to at least bargain over its price. We'll be tempted with
promises of political influence, protection, increased gov't funding,
and all sorts of apparently approving cultural goodies. At the same
time, from the other side of the bargaining table, we'll be
threatened with political exile, cultural disapproval, de-funding,
and even dire legal consequences up to and including jail time. These
negotiations are already well underway in the U.K., Canada, and
several states in our own country. [SanFran] Why is the Church being
targeted? The well-lived life of faith is an irritating obstacle to
those who imagine themselves freed from the slavery of sin. That
anyone anywhere would cling to the idea that God's truth is knowable;
His goodness obtainable; and His beauty enjoyable is. . .well, it's
just ridiculous; or worse, it's oppressive, mean-spirited, hateful.
That's what our faith is to some: an oppressive, mean-spirited, and
hateful indictment of their rightful choices; thus, they must either
negotiate the faith away or destroy it outright. But they cannot do
that if we follow Jesus' example and keep the money changers out of
his Father's house, keep our faith out of the buying and selling of
the flea market, away from the bargaining table and where it belongs:
thriving in a contrite heart ready for loving sacrifice.
Some things
cannot be bought, sold, or traded. One of those things—the single
most important thing—is the free given gift of our faith. Nothing
this world's money changers have to offer is worth the price of
abandoning our God.
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