January 13, 2013
Isaiah 40:1-5,9-11; Psalm
104; Titus 2:11-14; 3:4-7; Luke 3:15-16,21-22
“Comfort,
give comfort to my people, says your God.” The church wants us to realize what
God is doing for us on this feast of the Baptism of the Lord. God understands
that our existence, fraught with difficulties, causes us to lose hope. Some of
these hardships are unforeseen and unpredictable; others arise from our
sinfulness. Individual and social sins tear the fabric of society apart and we
get cut off from others, which makes us wonder if God is there for us. We wonder
why God allows certain events to happen to us and we want to know that someone
stands in solidarity with us.
God
responds by telling us what is in his heart. God speaks tenderly to us as a
sympathetic comforter and lets us know that our time of penance is over. We can
have confidence that God welcomes us back into the fold and integrates us into
his world. Many of us have an experience as a youngster of being punished by
our parents and sent to our rooms to think on the sin we committed. We disliked
getting scolded and cut off from our family. Sometimes we sank into our
self-pity or fumed in anger. We had to grapple with interpersonal loss – loss
of being connected. Once we had calmed down and was able to reflect on matters
more clearly, our parents lovingly brought us back into the family – sometimes
after a reasonable, yet caring conversation – sometimes after a stern command
not to act in the same way again.
Our
parents taught us proper boundaries; God does the same thing, but they both
re-integrate us and restore us to our loved ones. They both redeem and accept
us wholeheartedly, even when they do not condone our behavior. Neither parents
nor God want to see us cut off from them. Rather, they want to compassionately
teach us to act righteously and to be without harmful sin. With contrite
hearts, we can see the ways we harm ourselves and others while also seeing the
good God and parents intend for us – even if it smarts.
Let’s
look at the Gospel. The people gather around John the Baptist seeking confirmation
that he is the Christ, the Messiah. They want him to be the One. When Jesus and
all the people are baptized, it then happens that Jesus goes to pray. During
that prayer, the Holy Spirit descends upon him in the form of a dove with a
voice from heaven declaring, “You are my beloved Son; with you I am well
pleased.” This scene comes as a surprise to all of John’s friends because he isn’t
the one appointed by God. The people believe in him and see his goodness, but
the more obscure Jesus from Nazareth becomes the anointed one. The change in worldview John’s disciples go
through is not easy for them because many remain loyal to John and cannot
easily give up their belief in him.
Change
comes with pain. We avoid pain and we find all sorts of reasons to blame the
agent of change. We risk losing what has long been comforting to us. We risk
losing our influence upon the process and we fail to see that security and
control are illusions. When change comes, we defensively try to control all the
more fiercely because we don’t want to lose what we have established. Our
childish impulses surface and we deal with our anger unhealthily – often
displacing it. We try to hurt others. I cannot speak for the feelings of John
the Baptist’s disciples, but I can know for sure - because they are human – that they had a
range of negative feelings about their friend being passed over. They cannot
accept Jesus as the anointed one until they actively work through anger and
loss. They are unable to receive grace with open arms until they let go of
their need to control their small world.
Paul,
in the second reading, tells us to reject godless ways and worldly desires. He
asks us in this age to live temperately (not hot-headed), justly (not with
retaliation or lashing out with hurtful words), and devoutly (always thinking
of doing good and putting the needs of others first) as we await the blessed
hope, which is the appearance of the glory of our great God and savior Jesus
Christ, who gave himself to deliver us from all lawlessness and to cleanse a
people as his own, eager to do what is good.
God
wants us to see what he has done for us in his kindness and generous love. To
do that, we are to realize who we are before God and others. John the Baptist
had to let his ego go so he could embrace Jesus of Nazareth. We ask ourselves,
“Do I need to let go of the illusion that I hold about myself?” Our attitude is
everything. It determines whether we can see Jesus as the Christ. It determines
whether I can accept him. We further must ask ourselves, “What are my
behavioral patterns during change and what do I need to do to embrace and be a
part of this new way of being?”
These
are tough questions to ask ourselves, but it is what baptism is all about. It
is letting death come, or better yet, killing our illusions and letting the way
of sin and death be a part of the past. It is about participating in the new
life that is offered to us and restoring us as a whole person to the community
of faith. Parents instinctively know how to do it with their wayward children.
God offers it for us. When we take our eyes off ourselves and see what God
holds out to us, we cannot help but embrace the new change that we once feared.
We immerse ourselves in new life and wonder why we delayed. Then, we want to
bring others to the liberation that God offers us through Christ. We hear him
say again and again, “You are my beloved; with you I am well pleased.”
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading: In Ordinary time, we shift to Hebrews where the
nature of Jesus is explained. The author tells us that in times past, God spoke
through prophets, but now God is able to speak directly through Jesus who was
made heir of all things. God did not subject all things to angels, but in order
to subject all things to himself he required that his Son make salvation
perfect through suffering. Jesus shared in the blood and flesh that through
death he might destroy the one who has the power over death. He frees those who
fear death and have been subject to slavery all their life. Jesus became a
descendent of Abraham in order that he become like his brothers and sisters in
every way.
Take care that none of
you may have an evil and unfaithful heart so as to forsake the Living God. Be
on guard to receive the good news just like our ancestors did. Let us enter
into the rest Jesus offers us because he has won our salvation. The word of God
is living and effective, sharper than a two-edged sword, penetrating between
soul and spirit. We have a high priest who is able to sympathize with us in our
weaknesses because he was tested in every way, yet without sin. Because of this
we can confidently approach the throne of grace to receive mercy and to find
grace for timely help.
Gospel:
After John the Baptist is arrested, Jesus begins to proclaim the Gospel of God
and the time of fulfillment. He calls Simon and his brother Andrew beckoning
them to become fishers of all people. Later, he calls James and John, the sons
of Zebedee. Jesus arrives in Capernaum and teaches in the synagogue. An unclean
spirit recognizes him and calls us, “What have you to do with us, Jesus of
Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us?” Jesus teaches with authority over
spirits. They arrive at the house of Simon and Andrew, and Jesus heals Simon’s
mother in law who is gripped with a fever. At evening, people bring all sorts
of people to Jesus to be healed and exorcised. A leper then approaches Jesus
and asks Jesus to cleanse him, if Jesus wishes it. Of course, he does. In doing
so, Jesus becomes ritually unclean and must avoid towns and villages. When
Jesus returns to Capernaum, he teaches again at his home. Four men bring a
paralytic to him by opening the roof and lowering him so Jesus can see him.
Jesus forgives his sin and then heals him. Jesus then sees Levi, a tax
collector, at his customs posts and asks him to join him in his ministry. Many
object to his choice of disciples and wonder if he has lost perspective.
Saints of the Week
January 13: The Baptism of the Lord is recounted in
Mark’s Gospel where the baptism of water is to be replaced by a baptism of
fire. God confirms the person of Jesus when he rises from the water and a dove
alights on his head. God is well pleased.
January 14: Hilary, bishop and doctor (315-367),
was born in Gaul and received the faith as an adult. He was made bishop of
Poitiers and defended the church against the Arian heresy. He was exiled to the
Eastern Church where his orthodox rigidity made him too much to handle so the
emperor accepted him back.
January 17: Anthony, Abbot (251-356), was a wealthy
Egyptian who gave away his inheritance to become a hermit. Many people sought
him out for his holiness and asceticism. After many years in solitude, he
formed the first Christian monastic community. Since he was revered, he went to
Alexandria to encourage the persecuted Christians. He met Athanasius and helped
him fight Arianism.
This Week in
Jesuit History
·
Jan 13, 1547. At the Council of Trent,
Fr. James Laynez, as a papal theologian, defended the Catholic doctrine on the
sacraments in a learned three-hour discourse.
·
Jan 14, 1989. The death of John Ford
SJ, moral theologian and teacher at Weston College and Boston College. He
served on the papal commission on birth control.
·
Jan 15, 1955. The death of Daniel Lord
SJ, popular writer, national director of the Sodality, founder of the Summer
School of Catholic Action, and editor of The
Queen's Work.
·
Jan 16, 1656. At Meliapore, the death
of Fr. Robert de Nobili, nephew of Cardinal Bellarmine. Sent to the Madura
mission, he learned to speak three languages and for 45 years labored among the
high caste Brahmins.
·
Jan 17, 1890. Benedict Sestini died. He
was an astronomer, editor, architect, mathematician, and teacher at Woodstock
College.
·
Jan 18, 1615. The French Jesuits began
a mission in Danang, Vietnam.
·
Jan 19, 1561. In South Africa, the
baptism of the powerful King of Monomotapa, the king's mother, and 300 chiefs
by Fr. Goncalvo de Silveira.
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