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Friday, 19 January 2024

3rd Sunday Year B, 2024

 

(Jonah 3: 1-5, 10; 1st. Corinthians 7: 29-31; Mark 1: 14-20)

In the Gospel reading today we have St. Mark’s account of Our Lord’s proclamation to Israel at the beginning of His public ministry, and we can expect that this might well contain something absolutely central to His teaching:

This is the time of fulfilment. The kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the Gospel.

He declares the imminent proximity of that which had been foretold by the prophets and longed for by the faithful for over a thousand years. What joy!  God has been mindful of His People, has seen their distress, and is now about to bring them salvation!  What then should they do to welcome Him and embrace the salvation He offers? 

            Repent …… and believe in the Gospel!

Notice the order of the words.  “Repent” comes first; then, “believe in the Gospel”.  Repentance has to come first in order for us to be able to believe in the Gospel, as Jesus says elsewhere, those who seek the Truth will recognize the divine provenance of His, Jesus’, words.    Israel had learnt -- from their inability to keep God’s Law as given them through the prophet Moses -- the reality of the sinfulness alienating them from their God; and such awareness did indeed entitle them to be known as the People of God because it was unique in the world of that time, and enabled them to have a unique appreciation of the transcendent holiness of the one true God.

If Jesus had presented Himself as a charismatic leader come to drive the Romans out of the Promised Land, then there would not have been a call to repentance, the first thing would have been a call to arms: “Aux armes, citoyens” as the French cry in their national anthem; and Jesus would have been merely a somewhat bigger and better version of Judah’s legendary King David, who had, in a measure, foreshadowed Jesus in his beautiful – but, at times, overpoweringly fragile – humanity, and in the disarming sincerity of his love of God in a life scarred, nevertheless, by political and personal scheming.

Jesus, however, was the very Word and only-begotten Son of God, made flesh; and He came with a message concerning Israel’s intimate relationship with her God, not her political status with Rome; for in order to embrace God’s offer of salvation it was, and still is, necessary to recognise, acknowledge, and humbly accept, the truth of God’s charge of individual sinfulness and corporate responsibility.  None can appreciate God’s Truth offering salvation who are not willing to hear His Truth telling them of their need to be saved from sin: their own sin and the resultant sinfulness of their world.  A disciple of Jesus must first of all be willing to repent in that personal way in order to wholeheartedly receive and believe the Good News of the Gospel, offering purification from his or her old sinful ways and transformation into what is new and Godly, child-like and Divine.

John the Baptist required of those coming forward to receive ritual purification by his immersing them in the waters of the river Jordan something that modern society can appreciate, namely works; works, however, of a deeply religious significance:

You brood of vipers, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?  Bear fruits in keeping with repentance.         

And when the crowds questioned him, saying, ‘what shall we do?’, he would answer them with examples he considered acceptable to God as signs of their turning away from the sin hitherto too prevalent in their lives:

The man who has two tunics is to share with him who has none; and he who has food is to do likewise. (Luke 3: 7-8, 10-11)

Jesus, however, goes much deeper, indeed, to the very root of Israel’s sinfulness; His first words are straight to the point::

            Repent, and believe in the Gospel  (Show true repentance by believing My Truth).

For people rarely do even good works from pure motives: those practically-minded can be genuinely trying to help others, but also wanting to prove their own human (‘good fellow, good woman’) individual worth.  Others, more intellectual, can pronounce themselves to be ‘very proud of what they do’, because it shows that they have no need of redemption, or  any other sort of  ‘saving’ by a so-called God.

Today, dear People of God, the very best works our disbelieving world has to offer are works of personal generosity or human endeavour, on the part of those performing them; but they are not works of goodness, flowing from the  transcendent goodness of the almighty and eternal God Who is the Father of us all.

Now Jesus willed and wanted all His disciples’ works to be done with humility, and for love of God,  because He Himself came among us to live and die for love of His Father and to suffer for love of us.  therefore, He said:

            Repent -- root and branches -- and believe – wholeheartedly -- in the Gospel.

Salvation is an offer from God, of eternal blessedness as a child of God, to one who has believed in His only-begotten Son sent among men to save them.  The ancient scriptures had long proclaimed that human kind is not -- as Buddhists like to think -- on a level with earthly things, part of, and essentially bound up with creation around us.  For Moses and the prophets told God’s chosen people that only humankind had been originally made in the image and likeness of God. And Jesus was now come to proclaim and to offer that, in Him -- the Son of God made flesh -- our sin-scarred likeness to God could be restored and brought to the ultimate joy of its heavenly fulfilment and perfection. 

Today there are very many who do not want to hear about human dignity transcending  the rest of creation, because they do not want to be called to strive for anything other than what they can immediately see, hear, taste and enjoy.  They do not want to aspire for yet higher things, they seek to just enjoy, get as much as they can -- here and now -- out of what they have got, or lies at hand.  Consequently, the idea that human beings have a greater dignity and a higher destiny than that of the world around us seems to them a preposterous suggestion, because it is, first of all, an unwelcome one.

God sent His Son to take on human flesh as perfect God and perfect Man, showing us both the possibility and the way to become truly one with God:

            I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

Such oneness cannot be attained by any merely human works, and that is why Jesus did not, first of all, call for works; rather He demanded, first of all, faith in His own Personal Being and in the truth of His Gospel, whereby human beings might be lifted up to a heavenly level by the sheer goodness of God, in Jesus, through the Spirit.  Heaven cannot be gained by any human excellence or power because heaven is not a place to be found, nor a state to be acquired: heaven is a relationship with and presence to the three Persons of the most holy Trinity of Love, into which only Jesus -- the beloved and only-begotten Son, Word of the Father -- can lead those who, in faith submit to Him and aspire, by His gift of the Holy Spirit, to the promise of heaven proclaimed by His Gospel.   

We need to stop living as if we are simply part of this earth in which all our happiness and fulfilment is to be found.  The blessings of life on earth are indeed, many, because God has made all things good; nevertheless, they were meant for us to use on the way to our eternal destiny and calling, they were not intended to become a drug that would stultify any higher aspirations.  Because we have been fashioned by God in His own likeness, we are supreme over all things of earth, we are, most certainly, not meant to be ruled by things of earth.  Paul was speaking of this in our second reading:

I tell you, brothers, the time is running out. From now on, let those having wives act as not having them, those weeping as not weeping, those rejoicing as not rejoicing, those buying as not owning, those using the world as not using it fully. For the world in its present form is passing away.

Paul is saying that marriage may indeed be for you, that is, it may be of help for your salvation, but do not think that there is nothing better to come than marriage.  Likewise, those who mourn should not fear that their whole life has been totally blighted, for they are, in Jesus, destined to eternal joy and happiness; while those who are happy must not be so foolish as to think that earthly happiness can be compared to the blessedness awaiting those who will sit at the Lord’s Supper in heaven as God’s children; for, as St. Paul tells us:

Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared for those who love Him. (2:9)

Dear People of God, Jesus’ call, ‘Repent, and believe in the Gospel’, is an invitation -- most serious and pressing -- to help you recognize, and then realise, your true worth, your divine calling, and your eternal dignity.  Learn from Jesus, let Him teach you what to hate and avoid, but above all, what to love and whither to aspire: that is the essence of repenting.  If you thus commit yourself to the Gospel, that Good News will lead you to peace and give you strength in this world; and, for the future, an inviolable hope transcending all earthly limitations.

We should not be surprised that the message of the Church is unpopular today, if they hate Me, they will also hate you, because many are living in such a way that they cannot hear let alone understand God’s call: money is worshipped as the supreme goal of human endeavour because it promises tangible and alluring pleasure, buys obsequious respect, and provokes envious admiration on all sides.  Moreover, for many today, popularity is second only to money, and  so there can be no excellence accepted where popularity is wanting, and whatever is popular and exciting is considered to be excellent, no matter how tasteless, futile, or degrading it may be. 

Considering these aspects of our world today, surely, People of God, let us take heart from Jesus’ words recorded in the Gospel (John 16:33 and Matt 24:35):

These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace.  In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world. Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will by no means pass away.


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