Sunday, September 9, 2012

Jesus waits with us before walking with us – Lk 2:41-49

Continuing the Old College Holy Hour Series on Our Lady of Sorrows


Jesus’ parents used to go each year to Jerusalem for the feast of Passover. 
When he was twelve years old, he had gone up to Jerusalem according to the custom of the feast, and when the days of the feast were completed and the people were going away, Jesus remained, the boy in Jerusalem, and his parents did not know.
Thinking that he was amongst the fellow travelers on the way, they went a day’s journey and were seeking him out among their relatives and acquaintances.  When they did not find him, they turned around and returned to Jerusalem to search for him.
After three days, they found him in the Temple, sat in the middle of the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions.  All those who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his responses.
Upon seeing him, his parents were astounded and his mother said to him: “My child, why have you done this to us?  Look, your father and I have been seeking you in such grief.”
And he said to them: “Why did you seek me?  Did you not know that it is necessary for me to be amongst the things of my Father?”

~~


There was an ad that aired on British television in the run up to last Christmas.  It featured a young boy who longed for Christmas to come sooner.  We would see him gazing listlessly out of a window as the leaves slowly changed; we saw him mark off the days with tally marks on his wall; we saw him dress up in a wizard costume and zap the clock with his wand to try to make it go faster.  Finally, we see him wake up, way too early for his parents, on Christmas Day morning, eyes a-glimmer with excitement.  He takes a clumsily wrapped box from under his bed, walks into his parents’ room, and offers it to them.  The caption comes up: “Lewis’s – for gifts you can’t wait to give.” 

Jesus had nothing but gifts to offer, but he knew how to wait.  In Luke and Acts, the two-part story of how Jesus launches the Church on its mission, journey and gift are intimately connected.  Most of Luke’s gospel is taken up with Jesus’ final journey to Jerusalem.  He goes, teaching and healing as he walks to the city at the center of his faith to give his life for us.  Most of Acts concerns a journey in the opposite direction: the apostles start in Jerusalem, and through their ministry and Paul’s, the Gospel goes out from Jerusalem to Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth.  Like the first apostles, as apostolic religious we are also sent out on that journey to spread the gospel to the ends of the earth.  If you’re impatient to get going on a life of ministry, of crossing borders of every kind, that can point to a genuine zeal.

But, you have to wait.  You will do ministry as part of initial formation, you are doing ministry, and that’s a key part of it, but right now you are waiting.  Initial formation is a time to hurry up and wait. 

Jesus wasn’t ready to go yet.  He waited, he remained in Jerusalem, to sit at the feet of the great teachers in the Temple.  To ponder, to ask questions, to soak up the marvel of God’s action in the Passover, of God’s presence in the Temple.  Treat yourselves to this kind of waiting.  Jesus will walk with us, but first he waits with us.

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