To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 16:1-10; Jn 15:18-21
These verses of the Discourse on the Vine and the Branches focus not on the relationship of Jesus and the disciples, like the earlier verses did, but on the relationship of the disciples with the “world”. Here, the word “world” is used to represent, not the physical world, but those who are opposed to God’s revelation in Jesus.
The challenge of love will be truly encountered when the community faces the “world”. The “world” will hate the disciples because of their relationship with Jesus and because they live out his teachings. If the disciples want the world to love them, they must give up the teachings of Jesus. However, because they have been chosen by Jesus and set apart from the “world”, they too, like Jesus, will have to endure the “world’s” hatred.
The disciples must realize that following and obeying Jesus, as servants obey their masters, will lead to persecution. What has happened with Jesus will be repeated in the disciples’ lives. While the authority of the one sent is the same as the sender, it is also true that the response to the one sent will be the same as the response to the sender. Those who do not accept the word of truth, spoken by God in Jesus, will indulge in persecution. Those who accept the word will respond by living out that word in their lives. Rejection of the disciples means rejection of Jesus because it is Jesus who sends them. Rejection of Jesus means rejection of God who sent him.
In
a world in which the resonating message is to “have more”, it is not always
easy to speak and live Jesus’ message to “be more”. Those who do this are
labeled as crazy and out of touch with reality. Possession of things has so
possessed us that we do not even realize that, most of the time, it is things
that possess us rather than the other way round. We are held by the things we
want to possess and they will not let us rest. Often, it begins with a small
possession and then goes on to something bigger and soon gets so big that we
lose control of ourselves and who we are. Our identity is linked with what we
have and what we have achieved. In a situation like this, we need to take stock
and decide when enough is enough. We need to ask ourselves whether we will live
our lives moving from one possession to the next, often not even having the
time or energy to enjoy what we possess.
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