Tags
Christian life, Christianity, discipleship, faith, hope, Jesus, mercy, The Good Shepherd, Year of Mercy
One of the truths revealed in today’s gospel (Lk. 15:1-10) is that our God is not a God content to let people remain anonymous. The shepherd goes out in search of the lost sheep because that one sheep truly matters to him. The woman turns the house over searching for the lost coin because that coin is of real concern to her. We are of concern to God. We are not alone in a vast universe governed by random chance. We do not have a God who does not care. God is willing to seek each one of us out, willing to even enter the darkness of sin and death, to find us and then rejoice in the finding!
But this truth also applies to us who are called to be God’s people in our world. The Christian community is not meant to be an anonymous collection of individuals made up of people without names and without love – separate and alone. Because we have been loved by God and sought out by God we must, in turn, strive to love as God loves and seek out as God seeks out. The community Jesus calls us to is not one of anonymous and separate persons but of brothers and sisters who know each other by name. Friendship and care must be at the heart of the Christian community but it needs to be noted that this friendship is not of our own doing or crafting. The friendship of the Christian community flows out of Jesus’ own call to his disciples and obedience to his Word. The origin of friendship in the Christian community is in God himself. This is a great mystery and it is a mystery we are called to live and it is a mystery we proclaim in front of a world that seems so intent on reducing the full dignity of the human person to just a caricature of the anonymous individual.
Every person has a name. Every person has a worth. Every person is valued and sought out by God. No one is left behind. We need to live this friendship of Christ as Church and, by so doing, witness to our world. For a Christian community to have the most beautiful sanctuary or the most active list of ministries without this friendship that seeks out is (to paraphrase St. Paul and our Lord himself) to be just a noisy gong, a clashing cymbal and even a whitewashed tomb. No life is ultimately produced.
The identity of the Church is not found by remaining within but is realized in mission. It has been this way from the very beginning with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and the call to proclaim the good news to the ends of the world! We each have a name given by God and a task given by God, we only become who we are meant to be as we live the task we have been given. The Christian community only becomes who she is meant to be when she lives the friendship she has been given by Christ.
This friendship begins within the Christian community herself and then it goes out into the world. We must seek out one another. We must be of concern to one another. In order to be true to the gift that we were given (meaning being sought out by God himself), we cannot remain content in just being a collection of anonymous individuals. When we meet one another in the friendship of Christ we learn we can even look out on the multitudes of our world and see not just anonymous individuals who threaten my space and my freedom but brothers and sisters and the multitudes of people who are alone and suffering learn that they are in fact not alone and that there is a God and a people who seek to care and who seek to know their name.
Jewish midrash is a way of interpreting Hebrew Scripture that seeks to fill in the gaps and therefore bring forth truths of faith. A midrash on the scene of God appearing to Moses in the burning bush that we heard in the first reading (Ex. 3:1-8a,13-15) holds that the bush had thorns. God witnessed the suffering of the Hebrew people in Egypt, their daily struggle and pain, and therefore God chose to reveal Himself to Moses in the midst of a thorn bush to show that He is a God who is present in the midst of the suffering of his people.
hrist comes to reveal the truth of who God is and to call us into relationship with Him because here and only here is where we will find true life. What choice will we make? We each have only so many days allotted us.
The week before the first Sunday of Advent I ventured into a local craft store in search of Advent candles. After inquiry, a sales associate led me to the candles. We passed one, then two, then three, four and five full aisles of Christmas decorations. Arriving at the last row she pointed to a small stack of Advent candles on the bottom corner of a shelf. Quite sad in comparison. I cannot help but reflect on the symbolism. As I write this reflection there has been yet another mass shooting in our country. I do not make this jump from searching for Advent candles to a mass shooting in order to be flippant or sensational, I share it because I believe Advent offers needed lessons for our world today but honestly I fear these lessons may fall on deaf ears because they will require work, sacrifice and even risk on our part.