Thursday, September 20, 2018

The Obnoxious One


Deacon Tom Writes
“The Obnoxious One”


The world we live in today is not very much different than the world that Jesus lived in when it comes to our human nature. Scripture documents one particularly dark aspect of our human nature: we victimize the innocent; we persecute the just. The Book of Wisdom fashions an image for us that reveals the epic struggle that has persisted for all time, that of good versus evil. When good is manifested in human form, it is deemed to be obnoxious to the wicked because it stands in its way, exposes it for what it is, and reveals its vile nature and, therefore, it must be destroyed. So it has been throughout time and its saga has filled the journals of history. And, least we forget, Jesus is at the center of this classic struggle, the obnoxious one who sides with the victim, the vanquished.

This is the struggle we face throughout our lifetime expressed by St. Paul in his letter to the Ephesians. It is a constant battle between good and evil, between those who seek the transcendent values of truth, goodness, and beauty and those who are unrestrained in their pursuit of temporal power, privilege, and control. “For our struggle is not with flesh and blood but with the principalities, with the powers, with the world rulers of this present darkness, with the evil spirits in the heavens”. Eph 6:12 St. Paul makes it perfectly clear the “powers” we are up against.

Fascinating, then, is the question that St. James asks, “Where do the wars and where do the conflicts among you come from?” The answer to this question lies within us. It is our insatiable passions; our self-absorbed desires, our need to be first, our attitudes that we are better than others, our belief that I deserve more or they deserve less, that stir within us so that we “war” within ourselves. We witness a daily display of greed, egomania, and envy in our twenty-minute nightly newscast (ten minutes of commercials telling us to buy more stuff). You get the point.

Where does this end? If the parables of Jesus hold true, we are headed toward a bad ending. There are too many victims and too few “obnoxious ones” taking their blows while standing boldly for truth, justice, goodness, and mercy; who work to end the victim making; who sacrifice so others can enjoy the dignity that God has bestowed on all His children; who speak out against the evils of our time.

Jesus often uses the caveat , “For those who have eyes...” Are we able to open our eyes and see how the desires of the human heart are out of control? Isn’t it time to begin asking how are we going to solve these problems? Instead of pointing the finger and blaming others, isn’t it time to stop and reflect how we have ALL had some role to play in the problems our world is facing today? If so, recall Einstein’s famous words to the effect that no problem can be solved those who created it. We are not able to solve the problems we face because we are the ones who created them in the first place.

We are in desperate need for solutions to the difficult problems we face today, but they won’t come from government or business leaders. The solutions to the problems we face individually and as a society can only be found in the search for a wisdom that comes from a much higher source, the wisdom from above, the wisdom St. James says is, “pure, peaceable, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good fruits, without inconsistency or insincerity”. A wisdom that the world does not know, a wisdom that empowers us to become “obnoxious” and enables us to, deny our self, pick up our cross and follow Jesus.

If it is the world that shapes our desires, than naturally we will want more of what the world has to offer. If, on the other hand, our desires are for the things of God, He will be our help. He will provide all that we need to make things right in our lives, for He alone can give us wisdom from above.

Enjoy the day!
Deacon Tom

Artwork: Christ Of Maryknoll_Lentz.jpg

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