To read the texts click on the texts: Jon 3:1-5,10; 1 Cor 7:29-31;Mk1:14-20
The
common thread that runs through the first reading and Gospel of today is the
invitation, or call that is made, and the response to it. If, in the first
reading, Jonah calls the people of Nineveh to repentance and they respond, in
the Gospel of today, Jesus calls the first disciples to be fishers of men and
women, and they respond. A positive note is thus struck. There is an adequate response made to both
calls.
Jonah
is invited by God, in the first reading of today, with three imperatives. He is
called to Arise, to Go, and to Proclaim the message that God himself will give.
He responds here with alacrity, following God’s invitation perfectly. He arose,
went, and proclaimed. Though the content of his proclamation is not specified
by God, Jonah proclaims a call to repentance, an overturning, a complete
reversal of the world. The response of all people, from the greatest to the
least, was to listen to the proclamation and to act on it immediately. It is not the repentance of the Ninevites
that results in God’s repentance, since human action can never dictate divine
response. It is God’s graciousness and long standing patience that leads to
God’s repentance. God does what he does freely.
That
this is the case is made more than amply clear in the preaching of Jesus, when
he “came into Galilee”. However, even before Jesus can utter the first words in
his Gospel, Mark gives us four pointers or indicators. The reason why he does
this is because the message that Jesus will proclaim and the words that he will
speak are revolutionary and novel. The
words of Jesus will result in waking the listener from his/her sleep and in
turning the world of the listener upside down. This first of these four
indicators is a Time indicator: “After John had been arrested”. The reason for
the mention of the arrest of John the Baptist here, and just before the
proclamation of Jesus, is to effectively remove John from the scene and to
prepare the reader for both the departure of John and the arrival of Jesus.
This is because with Jesus, a new time has come, a new message is brought and a
new kingdom is inaugurated. The old time of John is now over. The second
indicator is a Place indicator: “Jesus came into Galilee” which, in Mark, is
the place where Jesus is at home. It is a place of acceptance and proclamation
and the place where miracles are worked. In Mark, Jesus proclaims the kingdom
and works all his miracles only in Galilee and never in Jerusalem. Even when he
is misunderstood in Galilee, the ones who cause the trouble come from Jerusalem.
The third indicator is a Form indicator: “Proclaiming” which indicates, as in
the case of Jonah, the crying out of an urgent message. The proclamation does
not explicate or give details, it simply invites, beckons, and challenges the
listener to hear and respond. The fourth and final indicator is a Content
indicator: “The good news of God” which means that it is about both the good
news about God, and the good news that God has authorized Jesus to proclaim. It
is only after this elaborate preparation that Jesus speaks. This proclamation
of Jesus may be summed up as: “The kingdom of God is here. Repent”. The
placement of the words is extremely important if one is to understand fully the
implications of this radical proclamation. In this proclamation, the indicative
is before the imperative or, in other words, because the kingdom has come,
people are called to repentance. The proclamation does not state that the
kingdom will come only if people repent or, that people must repent first for
the kingdom to come. Rather, God has taken the initiative, the first step, in
the movement towards humans and they have only to respond. No human being can
do anything, or need do anything, to bring about the kingdom. It is given gratis, as a free gift to anyone
who is open to receive it.
What
does this mean in practice? On the lips of Jesus, the inauguration of the
kingdom would mean that, in him and in his ministry of preaching and healing,
God reigns or God rules. God’s forgiveness and mercy had been made visible. In
other word it means that God loves unconditionally, he forgives
unconditionally, he pardons unconditionally, he accepts unconditionally and, he
is merciful unconditionally. The response of those who are willing to accept
this startling revelation is one of acceptance of that love, forgiveness,
pardon, acceptance, and mercy. This is
not as easy as it sounds. Jesus calls
the people to repentance which does not mean that one must be sorry for one’s
sins. It means, rather, that one must get a new mind, a new heart, a new
vision, and a new way of looking, like the man who came home one day and told
his wife, “Honey, I’ve changed my mind”. “Thank God”, his wife replied, “I hope
the new one will function better”. The old, prejudiced, closed, and narrow mind
must be given up for a broad, flexible, and open mind that will take in, even
if not in its entirety, this enormous truth. Since this truth is not a truth
that Jesus wanted to keep to himself, but a truth to reveal to as many as
possible, he calls disciples to share in this mission. Simon and Andrew, James
and John, are called, and they respond immediately, and with generosity. They are willing to join Jesus in his mission
of transforming the world.
Stressing
the immediacy of this message, Paul invites the Corinthian community, in the
second reading of today, to this change of mind, heart, and vision. It is a
call to focus on things that matter, like the fact of God’s love, rather than
on things which will take one away from this revelation.
This
call is being issued to us today. It is
a call that we are challenged to issue to others. It is a realization of the
unconditional love, mercy, and forgiveness of God, made visible and available
in Jesus, freely, without charge or condition.
It is a love which must, therefore, be shared with others.
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