How are we
to enter the prayerfulness of Jesus? How are we to enter this temple of
his prayerfulness along with these two men in today's Gospel?
Because
Jesus is the Temple where heaven and earth meet. There the
prayerfulness of humanity to God and God to humanity is like the angels
ascending and descending on the Son of Man. Our temple is structured and
shaped and coloured by the life and death of Jesus, by his actions and
his Passion, by his words and by his silences -- the eloquent silences
of the embodied Word. How to enter into this in which we are 'to live
and move and have our being'?
There is the lovely story of the
earnest Catholic primary school teacher who was teaching this parable of
the Publican and the Pharisee to her children. In that characteristic
manner of all primary school teachers she summed up the session by
repeating the message a final time. To her horror she heard herself
saying, 'And so, children, aren't we all pleased that we are not like
that Pharisee who
'!
We all want to be the publican. We fool
ourselves. Anyone reading this web-site is much more like to resemble
the other gentleman -- the one with religious interests.
How is it
-- but so it is -- that the actual living out of the Christian life can
itself be a block to the prayerfulness of Christ which is its source
and sustenance? The very flourishing of the Christian life -- genuine
good flourishing -- can itself suffocate faith like thorns choking the
seedlings of the Word.
John of the Cross warns against spiritual
vices in holy people. Preachers, especially good preachers, are warned,
in particular by Gregory the Great at the end of his Pastoral Rule, to
return to themselves lest pride in what they have successfully conveyed
to others might itself choke off the very same graces.
We are to
enter the Temple by what we are not. We are to live in Christ by what we
are not. We hear the powerful resonance of Christ's prayerfulness at
the last supper, not only in regard to the fullness of his Father's
will, but also in his love for the emptiness of Peter's:
I have
prayed for you (Peter) that your own faith may not give out. And when
once you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.
We are to
enter and dwell in Christ by what we are not. Admitting what we are not
is the key to his mercy. Not our successes and triumphs, but our
failures and our faults are where he finds us, and carries us home on
his shoulders. The publican knew this.
Humility and recognition of
flaws, failures and downright sin are not a sign of weakness but of
openness to greater strength, his strength. The strange strong royal
sovereignty when he stood as a criminal before his judges.
He
himself became what he was not. In the incarnation, the eternal Word
became what He was not, a creature called out of nothingness into time
and place. In the Passion, 'God made him to be sin, who knew no
sin......so that in him we might become the righteousness of
God'. He became what he was not in his journey into His fullness. So we
can only enter into him by what we are not, as the publican knew.
But
our friend and other-self in the parable, and we ourselves in our
lives, are trapped into the gravitational pull of our all too heavy
self. We cannot pull away from self-referential incurving rather than
flying in freedom to larger spaces, travelling more lightly. Within this
self-tyranny others will always be assessed and always judged. It is a
Black Hole of the self. We enter into freedom by what we are not.
There
are two great 'Nots' in our lives. We are not God whose will is to be
done. We are not our neighbour whose needs are to be met. In the space
of these two 'Nots' Jesus gives us the graces for our flourishing:
Judge not and you will not be judged
Condemn not and you will not be condemned
Forgive and you will be forgiven
Be merciful and mercy will be shown you
Give and it will be given. (John Farrell O.P.torch.op.org: here)
Condemn not and you will not be condemned
Forgive and you will be forgiven
Be merciful and mercy will be shown you
Give and it will be given. (John Farrell O.P.torch.op.org: here)
No comments:
Post a Comment