To read the texts click on the texts: Is 50:5-9a; Jas 2:14-18; Mk 8:27-35
“Praise the Lord! Father,
my son has been healed from his cancer. Brother Peter laid his hands on him and
prayed and the cancer was gone.” These were the words spoken to me by the
mother of a young boy who was stricken with cancer. A month later, the cancer
came back stronger than before and before long, the young boy was called to
eternity.
Many interpreters of
Mark’s Gospel consider the Confession of Peter as the watershed of Mark’s
Gospel. This confession is the first part of the Gospel text of today. In a
sense, this is true because, everything up to this point in the Gospel seems to
lead to this confession and it is from this confession that the rest of the
Gospel flows. However, even as Peter confesses Jesus as Christ, he is not fully
aware of what he is really saying and Jesus has to both correct and enhance his
understanding through the words that he speaks after the confession.
The reason why Jesus asks
the disciples the two questions about his identity is not because he was facing
any sort of identity crisis, but because he wanted to ascertain whether the
people, and his disciples, really understood who he was. Where one would have
expected immediate praise from Jesus after Peter’s confession, there is the
surprising command to the disciples to tell no one about it. This might even
seem strange. However, deeper reading shows that this is not as strange as it
seems.
In the first part of
Mark’s Gospel, Jesus commands both demons and some of those whom he has healed
to silence after the exorcism and cures. He does not want them to reveal his
identity. The main reason for this seems to be that he did not want to be understood,
primarily, as a miracle or wonder worker. Here, too, he commands Peter and the
disciples to silence because it is clear that, though the correct confession
has been made with the lips, it is not a confession that has come from
understanding, That there is lack of understanding is evident in Peter’s rebuke
of Jesus after Jesus challenges him, and the disciples, to realize that, as Son
of Man, he must suffer, die, and be raised. This means that the title of
Messiah, for Jesus, is a title that can only be correct when in the same breath
one speaks of him as the Suffering Servant of God. While, for Peter, the title
“Messiah” excluded suffering, for Jesus there could be no “Messiah” without the
cross and vindication after it.
This image of the
Suffering servant is brought out in the first reading of today, which contains
the third of the fourth servant songs found in Isaiah. In this song, the focus
and elaboration is very clearly to exhort those who listen to it. They, who have
witnessed the servant’s activity and suffering, are called to follow in his
footsteps rather than go their own way of selfishness and self-interest. The
servant, very clearly, will follow God’s will no matter how difficult it may
be. God has taught him, prepared him, and will continue to help him. God will
not abandon him. God has faithfully responded to the servant in his situation
of distress, In fact, it is in the context of God’s attending to the servant
that affliction arises and yet, is borne without complaint or resistance to
bearing additional afflictions. The servant is helped by God precisely in his
ability to bear assaults. God is the source of strength more than of merited
justice, and God will, in time, vindicate his servant. No one is able to declare
the servant guilty, yet, despite his not being guilty; he will suffer in
silence and will suffer courageously.
We are living in a
culture in which suffering is seen as a negative and thus, something to be
avoided at all costs ad to be gotten rid of as soon as possible. This is not to
say that suffering is good and desirable or that God delights in human
suffering. As a matter of fact, in the second reading of today, James is
emphatic that a faith that does not show itself in deeds is a faith that is
dead. Only such a faith is truly alive that manifests itself in action. It has
to be a faith that results in making the pain and suffering of a fellow human
being less, and lighter to bear.
The Gospels, too,
explicate that Jesus reaches out to people in their need and redeems them from
their suffering. When he sends his disciples out on Mission, it is not merely
to preach but also to heal and make whole. Yet, we must also keep in mind that suffering
is part of the human condition and the fact that we are human means that we
will suffer. The call of the readings of today is not a call to run away from
suffering or regard it in any way as punishment from God. The call is to face
up to it squarely in the manner in which Jesus did. While we continue to
believe in the miracles of Jesus, and in the fact that Jesus can work miracles
even today, we must balance this understanding by realizing that there is also,
in Jesus, the cross. The challenge is to make God’s will for us, our own.
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