To read the texts click on the texts: Dt 30:15-20; 1 Tim 1:12-17; Lk 9:18-26
The readings of today set
the tone for the celebration of the Feast of St. Ignatius of Loyola, the
founder of the Society of Jesus or the Jesuits. In the first reading of today,
Moses makes a strong plea to the Israelites to choose life. Ignatius did precisely
that when he was convalescing after the injury he suffered at the battle of
Pamplona in 1520. His reflections during this time became the turning point of
his life. It was when lying in his sick bed and contemplating the life of
Christ that he decided that everything was refuse when compared with the
knowledge of Christ.
This deep and intimate
knowledge of Christ which was not merely intellectual but knowledge of the
heart, led him to love Christ with all his heart and mind and to follow him
unconditionally.
It was this intimate
knowledge of Christ which sustained him all through his life and especially
during the tremendous challenges that he faced. Like Paul, he too believed that
he received mercy from the Lord. One important reason for receiving this mercy
in such large measure was because he recognised that he was a sinner and in
need of God’s grace made available freely in Christ. Like Paul, Ignatius became
an example to many. One of these whom he converted through Christ’s grace was
the now famous Francis Xavier.
The Gospel text from Luke
serves as an apt description of how Ignatius perceived his master and Lord
Jesus. Though Luke depends on Mark for this scene of Peter’s confession, he has
made some significant changes in order to bring out his meaning of the text.
The first is that unlike Mark, Luke does not give the geographical location
(Caesarea Philippi), but gives instead the context of the prayer of Jesus.
Through this change, Luke makes the confession a spiritual experience. Luke
also changes Marks, “one of the prophets” to “one of the old prophets has
risen.” Though the difference does not appear to be great, it is for Luke. In
the Gospel of Luke, before Jesus everything is old. Jesus makes all things new.
Luke has also eliminated Peter’s refusal to accept Jesus as the suffering
Messiah and the rebuke of Peter by Jesus. Luke avoids narrating Marcan texts
that show Peter and even the disciples in a bad light.
The second question to
the disciples, “But who do you say that I am?” shows on the one hand that the
answers given of the crowd’s understanding of Jesus are inadequate, and on the
other that Jesus wants to know their understanding of him. In all the Synoptic
Gospels it is Peter who answers, but here too Luke adds to Mark’s, “You are the
Christ”, the words “of God”. The Greek word “Christos” means in English “the
anointed” and this conveys the meaning of royalty. However, by his addition,
Luke also brings in the prophetical dimension of Jesus’ person and mission.
This prophetical dimension is explicated in the verses, which follow the
confession of Peter, in which Jesus explains the kind of
Christ/Messiah/Anointed One that he will be. The reason for the rebuke or
“stern order” not to tell anyone is because Jesus wanted to avoid any
misunderstanding of the term which could be understood only in the glorious
sense. Jesus as “the Christ of God” will come in glory, but only after he has
gone to the cross, died, been buried and then raised.
Taken together the five
sayings on discipleship show clearly that
discipleship to Jesus requires a total commitment of life, taking the
cross, giving one’s life in obedience to Jesus’ direction, forsaking the pursuit
of wealth, and living out one’s discipleship publicly before others.
This is what Ignatius did
and taught others to do. Today more than 450 years after his death, his legacy
still remains. The Society of Jesus that he founded remains a Society that has
at its core the following of the Crucified Christ.
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