The
apostles said to the Lord , 'Increase our faith.' Their request seems
to come from nowhere. It is all the more striking because of the
language Luke uses. The word 'Lord' is repeated in the next verse but
the use of the words 'apostles', and 'faith' is also significant.
Although Jesus chose twelve and named them
apostles,we don't hear the term 'apostles' that much in Luke. He says
'the twelve' more often, and most often he uses the term 'disciples'. He
calls them apostles as they return from the missionary journey (9.10),
when they sit at table with Jesus on the night he was betrayed (22.14),
and when the women bring news of the empty tomb and resurrection on the
first day of the week (24.10). But this occasion is significant because
here the apostles are proactive.
The word 'faith' gets used sparingly as well. In fact
at this point he has only used the word 'faith' just five times. It
describes a disposition, something close to our word faithfulness.
Whether it is the men who lower their crippled friend through a roof
(5.20) or the centurion who had a slave at the point of death, who sends
others to Jesus with the message which we repeat in the Mass, 'I am not
worthy to have you come under my roof,' (6.6), or the repentant woman
in the house of Simon the Pharisee (7.50), or the woman who touched the
hem of his garment (8.48), it is their faith which Jesus sees.
By contrast, when the storm on the lake threatens the
safety of the disciples, so that they wake him up he says to them,
'Where is your faith?' (8.25). Faith is not faith if kept in reserve for
emergencies. Faith is lived daily and shapes the way we think and
behave. It is about receptivity to God's presence in our daily lives and
it is seen in our faithful behaviour.
At this stage the apostles are beginning to see their
own limitations for the task ahead. It is no accident that this request
follows on two sayings: one concerning apostolic care of the
vulnerable; the other the need to forgive readily. This is how the
disciple, and especially the apostle, should live each day. Each day is
to be lived in the presence of the Lord whose 'mercies never come to an
end' and 'are new every morning' (Lam 3.23). 'Be merciful, even as your
Father is merciful' (6.36). Here it is the apostles who recognise their
need for a stronger and deeper faith.
The Greek text can actually mean 'add to us faith.'
The request is a reminder that the source of our faith and that of the
apostles is the Lord himself.
Luke often uses the roles of the master and the
servant or slave to talk about discipleship, faith and faithfulness.
Here the point is that you can't expect a reward if all you are doing is
your duty. A small landowner would have had a single slave whose duties
included work in the fields by day and in the home by night. In that
social contract the word translated as thanks or gratitude does not mean
politeness or manners but means simply that the Master does not owe the
slave anything for his obedience. Again sometimes a lot is said to turn
on the particular word which is translated as unprofitable or unworthy
but really it can simply means a slave or servant to whom nothing is
owed (17.10).
The bottom line is that obedience is not a means to
some reward. It is simply what being an apostle and a disciple or is
about. The question 'Who is the greatest' (9.46; 22.24) should find no
room in the heart of a true disciple.
We should not expect much reward for what we do and
yet the Gospel and the faith the apostles have handed on to us promises
much. Jesus talks about another master who leaves his servants in charge
while he is away at a wedding feast and when he returns finds his
servants faithfully keeping watch. Of him Jesus says, 'he will gird
himself and have them sit at table and he will come and serve them'
(12.37).
George Herbert said much the same thing in his poem 'Love',
'And know you not, says Love, who bore the blame?
My dear, then I will serve.
You must sit down, says, Love, and taste my meat:
So I did sit and eat.'
My dear, then I will serve.
You must sit down, says, Love, and taste my meat:
So I did sit and eat.'
(Dermot Morrin O.P.torch.op.org:here)
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