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Friday, 2 February 2024

5th Sunday Year B, 2024

 

(Job 7:1-4, 6-7; 1st. Corinthians 9:16-19, 22-23; Mark 1:29-398)

Simon and his companions searched for Jesus and, on finding Him, they said:

“Everyone is looking for you.” 

He told them, “Let us go on to the nearby villages that I may preach there also. For this purpose have I come.”

We can appreciate from that passage of the Gospel that Jesus considered His preaching to be of supreme importance; and that most probably led that great disciple of Jesus, St. Paul, to make this otherwise surprising declaration in his first letter to the Corinthians:

            Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel. (1:17)

Throughout His public ministry Jesus’ preaching was a cause of astonishment to those who heard Him.  They reacted in this way both because of the content of His preaching -- many, for example, would say after hearing Him:

            Where did this man get this wisdom? (Matthew 13:54),

and also, because of the manner in which He addressed them, as you heard in last week’s Gospel passage:

The people were astonished at His teaching, for He taught them as one having authority and not as the scribes.

Now, this was not just the reaction of simple people perhaps too prone to religious excitement, it was also the response of the Temple guards – servants of the chief priests and Pharisees -- notoriously untouched by any such religious sensitivities, as St. John tells us in his Gospel (7:46):

            The officers answered, "Never has a man spoken the way this Man speaks.”

Indeed, St. Mark tells us (11:18), that the religious authorities themselves -- proud aristocrats and determined enemies of Jesus -- had a like appreciation of His preaching:

The chief priests and the scribes began seeking how to destroy Jesus; they were afraid of Him, for the whole crowd was astonished at His teaching.  

When the scribes -- learned in the Law and in the Jewish oral tradition -- addressed the people on some brief passage of the Law, they frequently did little more than string together a few quotes, taken them from earlier authorities or currently influential teachers, without themselves making any personal statements or commitment.

With Jesus, however, it was quite different: He might, indeed, quote on occasion, but only from the Scriptures;  other than that, He might proffer His own observations on everyday events and occurrences of human life, or make Personal references to the wonder and beauty of the natural world around, before finally -- by the fullness of the Spirit that was in Him -- delivering a teaching uniquely based on His own Personal authority, that was both sublimely expressive of God’s presence and purpose in the Scriptures, and yet most harmoniously in tune with nature, and with the experiences, the religious expectations  and aspirations, of ordinary men and women.

His was, indeed, an absolutely unique authority on, and interpreter of, divine realities, as both St. John (3:11-13) and St. Matthew (11:27) tell us:

Truly, truly, I (Jesus) say to you, We speak of what We know and testify of what We have seen, and you do not accept Our testimony. No one has ascended into heaven, but He Who descended from heaven: the Son of Man.

All things have been handed over to Me by My Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father; nor does anyone know the Father except the Son, and anyone to whom the Son wills to reveal Him. 

Now, St. Paul, by virtue of his God-given vocation as Doctor of the Nations, recognized and appreciated the absolute necessity of this aspect of Jesus’ teaching, as we can tell from the advice he gave to Titus (Titus 2:15), an early convert of his whom he later established as head of the church in Crete:

Say these things.  Exhort and correct with all authority. Let no one look down on you (because of your youth).

Today, the proclamation of the Gospel by public preaching is frequently mocked by those who foolishly and proudly ‘think they know it all’; or by others (more important ecclesiastically?) who think they have reasons more compelling than Our Lord’s own express example.  Nevertheless, public proclamation through authoritative Sunday  preaching  is absolutely essential for Mother Church, and it should not be abandoned for fear of jibes or unpopularity!   The authority so desirable in Mother Church’s preaching can only come from enlightened faith based on her witness to authentically Apostolic and Catholic Christian teaching: a faith which has been gratefully received, wholeheartedly believed over thousands of years, and is now -- even in a paganized West -- so deeply loved and revered that it has to be most reverently handed on to subsequent generations in the fulness of its wondrous beauty and divine truth.  Such authority in priest-and- people’s Catholic proclamation and Christian witness cannot be based on some stirred-up, emotional novelty, justified by any ‘paternal assurance’ of personal, compassionate, inspiration; it must come from a total commitment to what is traditional and transcendent in Mother Church, and yet, what is essentially part of, and indeed the only key to, our deepest human self, made in the image and likeness of God.  This total commitment to the God proclaimed by our faith can only come about to the extent in which we realize that our duty and glorious calling  as Catholics and Christians is to know the God of our proclamation p/Personally:

They will not hurt or destroy in all My holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the LORD as the waters cover the sea. (Isaiah 11:9)

This knowledge is not just some awareness of certain facts about God, the Scriptures, or about the Church; it must aspire to be a deeply personal appreciation of and love for God Himself, as manifested to us in the Person of Jesus Christ, witnessed to us by Jesus’ revelation of the Father, and confirmed by His Gift of the Holy Spirit in Mother Church.  This is a knowledge that can only be received by those who consistently and perseveringly seek to follow their Lord’s own example of commitment and love as shown by His constant communing with His Father in prayer:

Rising very early before dawn, He left and went off to a deserted place, where He prayed.   

It is the lack of such loving knowledge of, communion with, and whole-hearted response to, the Personal God Who deigns to dwell within His faithful servants, that bedevils the proclamation and the witness of Catholic priests and Christians today.

In the book of Hosea (4:6; 6:6) we are told:

My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Because you have rejected knowledge, I also will reject you from being My priest.

I delight in loyalty rather than sacrifice, and in the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings.

The world’s ‘religion’ today is above all a proclamation of self-sufficiency and mutual self- approbation: ‘we can do good of ourselves without any God’.  And because God is rejected as not-necessary, there is no authority able to give peace, strength, and coherence to the common man’s experience of life, all we have is woke doctrines and human (especially feminine) sensibilities.  The laws that would govern the nations all too often give expression to the lies and deceits of unconsciously ludicrous pride (as above) and corrosive self-interest; and the laws that would govern our own society is, at the best, only a series ‘ad hoc’ solutions quite unable to cure the root-ills of an irreligious, no longer God-fearing, nation.  For an ever-growing number of individuals there is no rudder to guide or govern their personal lives: only the  compulsive pressures of profit, the personal passions of pleasure, and social aspirations for power and popularity, all leading to an experience of Job’s words:

My days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle, and come to an end without hope.

Nevertheless, let us, People of God, take to heart the words of the great prophets:

He will raise us up on the third day that we may live before Him; so, let us know, let us press on to know, the LORD. (Hosea 6:2-3)

They will not hurt or destroy in all My holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the LORD as the waters cover the sea. (Isaiah 11:9)

Above all, of course, we must learn from Our Blessed Lord Himself (John 10:15):

As the Father knows Me, I know the Father; and I lay down My life for the sheep.

You (Samaritans) worship what you do not know; we  worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews.   (John 4:22)

This is eternal life, that they should know You the only true God, and the One Whom You sent, Jesus Christ.  (John 17:3)

        I do know Him (God) and I keep His word. (John 8:55)

 

The Son of God knew His Father’s infinite goodness-and-love for what He had originally created in His own likeness, and – loving Son that He was -- He willed to suffer in His humanity for love of us, and to die as Man for love of His Father, thus becoming Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, Word of God, born of the Virgin.

 

Dear People of God, let us pray that our Blessed Lord and Saviour may give authentic authority to both the preaching and proclamation of Mother Church and of us, her, individual, witnessing priests and people, in our troubled world of today.   


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