Saturday, January 18, 2014

God reaches out to us, and touches – 1 Sam 9 (selections); Mk 2:13-17

Saturday of the 1st week of Ordinary Time; St. Stan's.

Saul has lost the donkeys, but it’s not just the donkeys who are lost.  It’s the mark of someone who truly cares that when they’ve lost something, they themselves feel lost.  Saul is himself at a loss because he’s lost the donkeys.  The one who has lost out is out seeking.  But Saul’s also sought out.  And he’s found.  He’s found by Samuel, the prophet, the gift of God to his once barren mother and father, the faithful servant of the priest Eli, the seer of God, and now God’s tool, the one who lets himself be transparent to God’s purpose.

Saul gets found, not just by Samuel but, through Samuel, by God.  And Saul is not just found, but anointed.  Here we encounter the great marvel that God does not remain distant from us.  God seeks us out and God condescends to touch us, to anoint us, to use the messy physical things of our world and the messy fallible people of our world to reach out and touch.  I can’t read this narrative without thinking of baptizing, of the marvel that that I can say (any of us can say!) “I baptize you…” and then God acts.  I think of the oil with which I anoint the newly baptized to be priest, prophet and king.  Because that’s what happens when God reaches out to us and touches: we don’t remain the same.  Saul’s commission was clear: he was to be king for God’s people.  Not for himself!  The oily blessing Saul received was to be for the people of God.

If you know the rest of the story, you’ll know that he didn’t live up to that perfectly, or even all that well.  David will be given the kingship in his place, and David will prove himself fallible too.  David’s biological son Solomon will be the next king, and a good and wise king he will be, but similarly imperfect.  It’s not till we reach to the Gospel that we find the perfect son of David, the king who came to serve, the king who says to imperfect turncoat tax-collector Levi, “follow me.”  And then be sent; be an apostle for God’s people.  The imperfect people with whom Jesus wants to dine.


Friends, sharers in the anointing of Christ, let us feast, let us encounter Christ, and let us be for his people.

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