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Friday, 7 June 2024

10th Sunday Year B, 2024

 

(Genesis 3:9-15; 2nd. Corinthians 4:13 – 5:1; Saint Mark’s Gospel 3:20-35)

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, Jesus said in today’s Gospel reading words both puzzling and encouraging:

            Whoever does the will of God is My brother and sister and mother.

Whoever does the will of Godseems such an impersonal criterion; whereas ‘my brother and sister and mother’ are words so personal and friendly.  Of course, as you surely well know, we become brothers and sisters of Christ when He, by His baptismal Gift of the most Holy Spirit in Mother Church, draws us to Himself and so enables us to be nourished with His heavenly food: a food which is not assimilated by the recipient, but which, on the contrary, assimilates us to the  One thus giving Himself to us in Holy Communion.  In that way  we become not only His own brothers and sisters but also -- and most wonderfully -- adopted sons and daughters of His heavenly Father.

As regards becoming His ‘mother’  that also is understandable in a Eucharistic context in the sense that Christ is – so to speak – ‘conceived in us’ through baptism and then lives in us and grows gradually to maturity by His ever-renewed ‘gift of the Holy Spirit’ in each fruitful reception of Holy Communion.

Nevertheless, for Jesus, the ultimate and supremely decisive criterion of a true and acceptable disciple is, one ‘who does the will of God’, and that is because   Jesus spent His whole life on earth doing the will of His Father for our salvation.  Therefore all who aspire to become disciples of Jesus  must sincerely seek, intend, aspire, to ‘do the will of God’ as explained by Jesus Himself.

You will have noticed that Jesus’ words to describe a disciple of His, speak of a brother, a sister, and mother; but there is no mention of ‘a father’.

Dear People of God, the relationship of Jesus on earth with His Father in heaven was so mysterious, so intimate and so imperious, that even Our Blessed Lady was, so to speak, ‘at a loss’, even ‘all at sea’, with it at times, as we learn from the occasion when she thought it right to reprove her Son Who had remained behind in the Temple at Jerusalem unknown to herself and Saint Joseph.  At that time Jesus’ answer totally puzzled her:

            Did you not know that I must be in My Father’s house?

Those words ‘ in My Father’s house’ can also mean, about my Father’s business and they thus offered to one so contemplative as Mary something she would ponder  over. Indeed, something she would ultimately treasure when her Son finally left her and went with His disciples to preach His Good News to the people.  She  could most certainly understand and would be most humbly proud to know that on leaving her He was walking alone, wholeheartedly -- ‘about His father’s business’ – all the way to Calvary.

So, brothers and sisters, dear fellow disciples in Christ, Jesus words:

            Whoever does the will of God is My brother and sister and mother,

are both heavenly and earthly words, perfectly befitting Him Who is God-become-Man for men: they are heavenly words of companionship, ‘Whoever does the will of My Father’, and of God-pleasing  personal love, where ‘My brother and sister and mother’ are meant as true expressions of spontaneously  human love, which is firmly established upon a deep personal relationship,  not  founded on the shivering sands of carnal passion.

‘Doing the will of God’ was the aim of the Law under the Old covenant.  St. Paul discussed that question of the role of the old Law and his teaching is admirably summed up by the late C.H. Dodd in one of his early works:

‘Every individual of the human race is so entangled in the general “wrongness” that he has no power left to himself to avoid committing acts which, whether he knows it or not, add to the sum of wrong.  To know these acts are wrong does not prevent him from doing them, but it does imprint upon his conscience, in the indelible characters of shame and guilt, the contrast of good and evil.  It brings “sin” home, from being a general state of the human race, to be a conscious burden upon the mind of the individual.  And Paul sees that it is a great advance to have discovered sin in one’s own heart as guilt.  Only the man who is conscious of his guilt can be saved from the sin of which he is guilty.’

That ‘saving from sin’ comes to us, of course, through the death of the only sublimely Perfect Man,  His Resurrection and Ascension, His bequeathed sacrament of Baptism; and today, our own efforts to conform our behaviour to God’s will in all circumstances ... all of which serves, to quote Saint Paul (Ephesians 4:12-13):

To equip the holy ones for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ until we all attain to the unity of faith and knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the extent  of the full stature of Christ;

or, in simpler words, to become truly adopted sons and daughters of God the Father.      

I do not want to keep you unduly, dear fellow disciples of Jesus, but I also would like to encourage your continued  thinking about today’s Scripture readings; therefore, just notice that our first reading centred on God the Father:

The Lord God called to the man and said to him, “Where are you?”.

Our second, on God the Son:

He who raised the Lord Jesus will raise us also with Jesus … so do not lose heart.

And our third reading, centred on the Holy Spirit:

Whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin.  

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