If instead of sin, He had been talking
about a diseased part of the body, we wouldn't find it particularly
objectionable if He had said we should cut it out if this would save our
life. The reason the thought of chopping our hands off is so
objectionable is because in reality there are other more fundamental
causes of our sin. The force of Jesus' language should alert us to the
urgency with which we need to deal with the real causes of sin. It
belongs to penance to cut out these causes.
Earlier on in Mark's Gospel, Jesus
does in fact allude to the cause of sin. He teaches that out of the
heart of man comes evil thoughts and actions. In this teaching we need
to remember that the hearer's of Jesus understood the heart to be not
only the source of a person's emotions, but also of their thoughts and
every decision they make. Our sins are caused by our disordered thoughts
and desires.
The Greek word for repentance,
meta-noia literally means a change of mind. We need to listen to the
prophetic voice of John the Baptist and repent. We need to reorder our
thoughts and desires, so that the way is clear for Christ to enter into
our lives. And we need to give expression to our repentance, to our
change of mind, through acts of penance. Traditionally the most
important forms of Christian penance have been prayer, fasting and
almsgiving. Perhaps if we were more aware of how penance cuts away the
causes of sin and enables us to be united with Christ, we might perform
our acts of penance more readily and joyfully.
All too often we would prefer to avoid
the need for penance, so we look away from our own hearts and we try to
find other external causes for our sin. We look for people and other
circumstances to blame. Jesus does recognise that people can cause
others to sin and that it is a terrible thing when this occurs, worse
than being thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around one's neck.
But Jesus is not telling us to be exclusive and cut people off from the
Church. It is the disciples who wanted to be exclusive. They wanted to
exclude the man casting out demons in Jesus' name because they didn't
consider him to be 'one of us.'
It is rather ironic that shortly
before this incident, the disciples were unable to cast out an unclean
spirit. When they asked Jesus why they were unable to cast it out, He
said that this kind cannot be driven out by anything but prayer and
fasting. So we might suppose that the outsider who successfully managed
to cast out a demon, was someone who prayed and fasted, someone who was
truly repentant. How terrible it is then, if we try to exclude such
people and block the path of repentance. Jesus' warning about causing
others to sin, is not so much a warning to others, but a warning to us.
Only God knows whether or not someone is truly repentant, so we are
putting our souls in great danger if we go around judging who is in the
in-crowd and who is not.
In cutting out the causes of sin, we
shouldn't start with other people – we should start with ourselves.
Trying to root out sin in other people is likely to lead to dissension,
to factions and to hatred. But if we try to root out the sin in
ourselves, if we examine our hearts and truly repent, we will enter into
the peace, unity and love of Christ.(Robert Verrill O.P torch.org.uk:here)
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