Twenty-Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time
Mark 9: 38-43, 45, 47-48.
Dear Friends, What seems like a simple lesson in Mark’s gospel passage for today, offers us a lot more. The teaching is about the presence of good outside the community and brokenness inside the community. Once again, Jesus’s words call us much deeper into the mystery of the kingdom of God. Today’s message has truly huge ramifications for our lives as individuals and as a community seeking to walk in the footsteps of Jesus.
There are three points about John’s statement and Jesus’ reaction that help us grasp the multilayered meaning of the lesson of Jesus. First and foremost, John, the disciple, misses the urgent reality of the kingdom that was taking place. The person was being liberated from the demonic powers. This event is manifesting the victory in the basic conflict of good and evil, sin and grace, the weeds and the wheat. Throughout the Gospels, the Scribes and Pharisees missed the same point in the miracles of Jesus. The power of God was on display right before their eyes. They were blinded in their hunger to protect their vested interests. The wonder of Jesus’ saving acts was distorted into an impediment to their self-serving agenda. Secondly, John’s focus is more directed towards maintaining personal privilege and power exemplified in his statement “one of us”. Thirdly, John is drawn inward to safeguard the group’s interests to the neglect of celebrating and exercising the healing mission of the kingdom. The Church has suffered from this arrogance and institutional self-interest throughout its history.
Jesus is pointing out something profound about the gospel. Jesus’ teachings set off a constant battle within people who are seeking to exclude rather than include. It is the power and presence of the kingdom that makes a difference. It is not the label of the performer as one in our group or outside our group that is foremost.
This issue became a critical teaching of Vatican II. God’s grace is universal and available to all. Often the initiator of the good acts may belong to another expression of the Christian faith. Frequently, it may be be a member of another religion altogether or even an agnostic or atheist. God’s saving grace is relentless in its presence and pursuit of every human being irrespective of religious trademarks. Down through the centuries the failure to understand this truth of the universality of grace has been the source of many failures of the Church to live and proclaim the gospel. Too often the Church has been dedicated to its institutional interests rather than the movement of God in the kingdom.
In the second part of today’s gospel, Jesus is using some incredibly strong language to highlight the need to build up the community. The hunger for prestige and power and an elitism and sense of privilege by the leaders is a scandal to “the little ones,” those still in the early stages of development in their faith. In the prophetic hyperbole, Jesus is demanding for us to keep our eye on the ball. The mission of the faith community we call Church is to proclaim the kingdom. The Church needs to be a humble witness to service and love, not an arrogant gathering of privileged and powerful. Too often, the Church fails to live up to the calling to treat all within the community with equality and a sense of dignity, not to mention the essential task of being a welcoming community. There were no parishes in Jesus day but the negativity of parochialism has been with us from the beginning. This turning in on itself has produce many evils that need the healing surgeries that Jesus suggests in his exaggerated language. There is no clearer example of this than the many dimensions of the sexual abuse scandal that has plagued the Church for the last several decades.
The Church is not the kingdom. It needs to be a witness to the values of the kingdom which are an infinitely greater reality. In the kingdom of God there is no “us and them”. The Church is not a program where the privileged and powerful are in control and use doctrine and discipline to exclude and isolate. The community of faith needs to include all. This requires an ever-expanding horizon of acceptance of the “other.” This is a call to embrace all the marginated and excluded in our day. We are never finished building up and enfolding a rellentlessly greater “us” and an ever-diminishing “them.” Our vocation is to cultivate a gracious respect for both the elements of difference and the richness of the gifts of others. We have a calling to reveal the infinite mercy and acceptance God.