Friday, October 16, 2015

To Be First Is To Be Last


Deacon Tom writes

“To Be First Is To Be Last”


On three separate occasion over this past month, St. Mark recounts Jesus in similar ways revealing his plan to his disciples that he was going to Jerusalem where he would “suffer many things, and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again”.

The first time Jesus tells his disciples this, you may recall from St. Marks account, Peter protests vehemently only to be rebuked by Jesus harshly, “Get behind me Satan”, Jesus tells Peter. Then in the following Sunday’s gospel, Jesus informs his disciples of his immanent death a second time, only to find his disciples arguing as to who was the greatest among them.

And finally, in the text leading up to today’s gospel, in Mark 10:32-34, Jesus again predicts his passion and death for a third time only to have James and John trying to secure the best seats in the house, those at the right and left hand of Jesus for themselves.

The disciples reaction to Jesus’ fate speaks volumes to us…They are in denial…They can’t “handle” this foundational “truth” of Jesus’ ministry to paraphrase a quote line from a Hollywood movie. After all, they had seen first hand Jesus as a “wonder worker”, healing the sick, cleansing leapers, raising the dead, revealing the deep, inner operations of the Kingdom of God.

And they, too, shared in this wonder working power for they had received  power and authority over all demons and to cure diseases” as we heard in our weekday gospel a while back.

I imagine the disciples enjoyed the attention and fame that came their way just by being associated with Jesus. From this vantage point, life is pretty good, isn’t it? But things began to change once Peter has this epiphany and recognizes Jesus as, “You are the Christ”. From that point forward Jesus unfolds a different direction for the road ahead:
- for him - that he would suffer, be rejected by the elder  and put to death, but will rise on the third day…
- and for any would-be disciple who… “wished to follow him”, that they too must likewise, “.. deny himself…[and] take up his cross…”. They, the Apostles, must embrace this new revelation of Jesus that, “Those who wish to be the first shall be the last of all and the servant of all”.

There is a change in mindset once his disciples hear what Jesus expects of them. And, it takes them awhile to “get it”. And that just may be the case for us as well. For, if we truly hear what Jesus is saying in these passages…we too can’t help realize that our calling as Christians isn’t to a life of fame, privilege, power, or success but rather,
 …we are called to a lifetime of service and sacrifice;
 …we are invited into a ministry of mercy and forgiveness;
 …we are summoned into a life of spiritual growth and interior
       transformation…So that, with St. Paul, we too can say,
        Yet I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me”. GAL 2:20

I believe Pope Francis is reaffirming this same message Christ gave his disciples two thousand years ago and that we have heard repeated on his recent visits to Cuba, Washington, D.C., New York, and Philadelphia. The teachings of Jesus that Pope Francis reaffirmed for us is that we are to be instruments of God’s love, mercy, and compassion, by seeking to put others and their needs before our own, and by seeking ways of peace and forgiveness.

And this is not a new message that Cardinal Bergoglio acquired once he became Pontiff. Back in 2007, as Cardinal of Buenos Aires, Jorge Mario Bergoglio wrote the closing document for the Fifth General Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean in Aparecida, Brazil.

In that lengthy document which summarized the main themes of that conference, he wrote:

 A Catholic faith reduced to mere baggage,
to a collection of rules and prohibitions,
to fragmented devotional practices,
to selective and partial adherence to the truths of the faith,
to occasional participation in some sacraments,
to the repetition of doctrinal principles,
to bland or nervous moralizing,
 that does not convert the life of the baptized
  would not withstand the trials of time.

Our greatest danger is the gray pragmatism of the daily life of the church in which everything apparently continues normally, but in reality the faith is being consumed and falling into meanness”.

Pope Francis is attempting to refocus our attention on one of the central truths of our faith: God has loved us and we are to love others without preference, without limit, without conditions.

We whose allegiance is to Christ today are to be witnesses of the love that God has shown to us in everything we say and by every action we do so that everyone around us can say, as they did in those early days of our church…

“See how they love one another……”


Enjoy the day!
Deacon Tom

Image: flyingfeetinfaith.com

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