April 6, 2018 at 1:53 p.m.
WORD OF FAITH
Faith is not painless
'What will it profit them if they gain the whole world, but forfeit their life? Or what will they give in return for their life?' - Matthew 16:26
I mentioned last week that the usual biblical way to surface God's will in our lives is to surface the prophets in our lives. On Sunday, we hear (Jeremiah 20:7-9) that being the community's prophet is a painful ministry.
Normally, we know only the prophet's words. Rarely are we privy to his or her feelings. The biblical prophets' disciples are good at collecting and arranging their oracles, but they almost never give us an insight into their mentors' hearts and minds.
The two exceptions are Deutero-Isaiah and Jeremiah. In three of the four Songs of the Suffering Servant of Yahweh, the former gives us a glimpse of his state of mind as he's preaching to the exiles in Babylon. In a similar way, chapters 10-20 of Jeremiah are interspersed with the prophet's biting "confessions:" his reflections on his relationship with Yahweh and the problems which his ministry creates.
Sunday's first reading is by far one of the most depressing in all of Scripture. Not only does Jeremiah's message revolve around "violence and outrage," but his ministry has resulted in his being "an object of laughter." He faces "derision and reproach all the day."
Though he tries to get out of it, he quickly discovers it's like resigning from the mafia: "I say to myself, I will not mention Him; I will speak in His name no more. But then it becomes like fire burning in my heart, imprisoned in my bones; I grow weary holding it in. I cannot endure it." He's trapped!
Duped into faith?
Yet the most disturbing aspect of Jeremiah's prophesying is his claim that Yahweh originally tricked him into volunteering for it: "You duped me, O Yahweh, and I let myself be duped."
Biblical scholar Rev. Carroll Stuhlmueller, CP, always insisted that the English word "duped" doesn't accurately convey the meaning of the original Hebrew. In other biblical passages, the word not only has the meaning of rape, but the forcible rape of a helpless person. That type of abuse can also be understood in the words, "You were too strong for me, and you triumphed."
No wonder Paul reminds the Christian community in Rome (Romans 12:1-2), "Offer your bodies as a living sacrifice. Do not conform yourselves to this age, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you might discern what is the will of God."
Anyone who commits himself or herself to surfacing the will of God must expect suffering - especially if they try to convey that will to their communities.
Prophets' traits
Matthew's Jesus agrees (Matthew 16:21-27): "Those who wish to come after me must deny themselves, take up their crosses and follow me. For those who wish to save their lives will lose them, but whoever loses their lives for my sake will find them."
Among the five criteria for distinguishing real prophets from fakes, two criteria state that not only does the authentic prophet suffer for delivering his or her message, but those who carry out their message will also suffer. That seems to be why Peter "rebukes" the prophetic Jesus when He talks about the suffering He expects to endure for His preaching and lifestyle.
Jesus has little patience with him. "Get behind me, Satan! You are an obstacle to me." The historical Jesus was convinced that if Peter was serious about conveying God's Word, he'd also have to be serious about enduring the pain that Word would bring.
Jeremiah, Paul and Jesus knew nothing of the "painless faith" many of us think we can and should achieve.[[In-content Ad]]
SOCIAL MEDIA
OSV NEWS
- Delaware law enforcement, governor, community mourn loss of trooper in fatal shooting
- From Chicago to Peru to Rome, Pope Leo remains ‘one of us,’ say US Catholics
- At home with Jesus
- Priest gets kidney from principal — and love, support, prayers from parishes, students
- Redemptorist priest’s explosive dispatches revealed Vatican II’s hidden conflicts
- Nigerian Catholic Church leaders give mixed reaction to US airstrikes
- US strikes Nigeria targeting Islamic extremists to ‘stop the slaughtering of Christians,’ says Trump
- 2025 brought new pope, new president, and immigration as key issue
- Linger in contemplation at the manger with the Holy Family
- Across the world, Christmas shines even — and especially — in the darkest places
Comments:
You must login to comment.