April 6, 2018 at 1:53 p.m.
WORD OF FAITH

Will the real God stand up?


By REV. ROGER KARBAN- | Comments: 0 | Leave a comment

FROM A READING FOR JAN. 25, THIRD SUNDAY OF THE YEAR
'Jesus saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net....Jesus said to them, "Follow me and I will make you fish for people." And immediately they left their nets and followed Him.' - Mark 1:14-20

Biblical calls always revolve around following a person - not dogmas or rules and regulations, not even a set plan of action. That creates problems for a lot of people. It certainly creates a huge problem for Jonah.

Many commentators overlook the message Yahweh gives Jonah to proclaim to the Ninevites in Sunday's first reading (Jonah 3:1-5,10). They refer to it as an oracle of "repentance."

Listen carefully to the prophet's words: "Forty days more and Nineveh shall be destroyed!" It's a prophecy of doom, not repentance. Yahweh's not calling on these Assyrians to repent; He's simply warning them not to buy any long-term life insurance: They're going to be wiped out.

But then, to everyone's surprise - especially Jonah's - the whole city, from the king to the animals, repents. Then something even more unpredictable happens: Yahweh repents! "When God saw by their actions how they turned from their evil way, He repented of the evil that He had threatened to do to them: He did not carry it out."

Cranky prophets
Nothing can be more disturbing to a prophet than discovering that, after he or she has delivered God's Word, God decides to change that Word. Jonah is ticked, reminding Yahweh that he ran away to Tarshish in the first place because he couldn't depend on Yahweh following through on any prophecy He gave Jonah to deliver.

Jonah and the people for whom this book was originally written have an image of God in their minds that they expect God to live up to. The author of Jonah wants us to examine our consciences: When we claim to be followers of God, are we following a picture of God we've conjured up in our minds, or the actual person?

It's clear from Sunday's Gospel passage (Mark 1:14-20) that Christians are also expected to follow a real person: the risen Jesus.

Jesus' invitation to His first four Gospel followers is quite simple: "Come after me, and I will make you fishers of people." There are no limits to the call, no specifics, except for making people more important than the four's present occupation. They're to begin their discipleship by adopting the value system of the one who calls them.

At odds with everyone
People are now to be at the center of their lives. They, like anyone called to be another Christ, respond totally and immediately, even putting their family ties on a back burner.

As Paul realizes (I Corinthians 7:29-31), more than 10 years before the first Gospel is written, those who follow Jesus live lives frequently at odds with others around them: "Let those having wives act as not having them, those weeping as not weeping, those rejoicing as not rejoicing. For the world in its present form is passing away."

Everything changes when we change the way we relate to others. It's the only way to create a new world.

Going back to our Jonah passage, how does one explain Yahweh changing His mind? Theologian Hans Walter Wolff had a simple but powerful explanation: "Yahweh doesn't have to be faithful to Yahweh's Word, as long as Yahweh is faithful to Yahweh's people."

Real people are always subject to change, especially when people around them change. Who among us hasn't changed our word when circumstances or people changed in ways which made our word counterproductive? No wonder we're tempted to create an unchangeable image of the God we follow: If God doesn't change, then we don't have to change.[[In-content Ad]]

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