To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 15:1-2, 22-29; Rev 21:10-14, 22-23; Jn 14:23-29
A priest was invited to a
meal by one of his parishioners during the season of Lent and on a Friday. He
sat down at table and was surprised when most of the dishes placed in front of
him contained meat. He remarked to the parishioner that they were in the Lenten
season and, even more significant, that the day was Friday and meat could not
be eaten. The parishioner replied, “Do not worry, father. I sprinkled some holy
water on all the meat, baptized it, and called it fish.” Did the meat become
fish? Did the priest eat the “meat”? Was he guilty of sin if he did eat? Was
the parishioner making a joke of the whole Lenten season? These are questions
for which we find responses in the readings of today.
Christianity was never
meant to be a religion of rules and regulations. More than once, Jesus
encountered people who had made rules and regulations ends in themselves. And, more than once, indeed often, in his
responses to such people, he would ask that the focus be on love rather than on
law, that it be on the person rather than on the rule, and that it be on the
heart rather than on the body. Yet, it seems that, more and more, we continue
to focus on the external rather than the internal.
This is evident in the
first reading of today when, a few years after the death and resurrection of
Jesus, the first Christian community is debating about what makes a Christian
and a disciple of Jesus. Their focus is on the external, on circumcision, on
the body. However, even as they debated, they realised that this is not what
Jesus had intended at all. The Spirit inspired them to change their focus to
the internal, to the heart. This is the same Spirit that Jesus promised the
disciples in the Gospel text of today. This Spirit is the Spirit of Jesus and
so, will not teach something different from what Jesus taught. Rather, the Spirit that Jesus sent, and
continues to send, will reinforce and confirm all that they have been taught by
Jesus. By listening to this Spirit of freedom, they will be empowered to keep
the word spoken to them and enable Jesus and the Father to make a home with
them. The word spoken to them by Jesus was not a set of rules and
regulations. The word spoken to them was
not a list of commandments. The word
spoken to them was not, primarily, a word about the law. It was always, with
Jesus, a word of love. This is why the gift that Jesus leaves with the
disciples is the gift of peace, which means wholeness and well being. The focus
of the gift is the heart.
Since this is so, the
Book of Revelation, in the second reading of today, can speak of the apostles
as being the foundations of the new Temple and of God and Jesus being the
Temple. There are no bricks and no walls that make up the new Temple. It is a
Temple which has as its cornerstone, Jesus himself. This new Temple will not need external light.
It will not even need the sun and the moon.
Jesus will be all the light that the Temple needs.
Why is it that, almost
from the “foundation” of Christianity, and continuing even today, the Church
has focussed on externals and on what constitutes and does not constitute sin?
There could be a variety of reasons for this. The core reason, however, seems
to be that, like Jesus was misunderstood so often in his lifetime, he was
misunderstood also after his death and resurrection. Instead of being content
with living out the message of love, the Church became more interested in
converting others to Jesus. Instead of showing, in and through the reality of
love, what it meant to be a disciple of Jesus, the Church focussed, on merely
proclaiming the word. Instead of
concentrating on Jesus and his Spirit, the Church shifted the focus to
everything else. We moved our gaze away from the crucified Jesus and risen
Christ.
What must we do to bring
back this focus? What must we do? Only one response is required: the response
of love. As Jesus lived out throughout his life, and in the face of all
opposition, the reality of unconditional and absolute love, so we, as Church,
are called to do so today. We need not concern ourselves so much with numbers
and statistics, but with living out the message that Jesus brought. We need not
concern ourselves with external conversions, but must focus more on the
conversion of the heart. We need not worry so much about eating or not eating
meat and fish and thus, what goes in, but must concentrate instead on what
comes out from within. Then, that Temple, which John speaks about in the second
reading of today, will become a reality. Then, its light will be the glory of
God and the Lamb. Then, the Spirit that Jesus sent, and continues to send even
today, will not be stifled and will be free to transform our lives and the
lives of those we encounter and so, win them over to love.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You may use the "Anonymous" option to leave a comment if you do not possess a Google Account. But please leave your name and URL as www.errolsj.com