Sunday, June 10, 2018

God frees us from fearful grasping – Mark 3:20-35, Gen 3:9-15

10th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year B; St. Adalbert's and St. Stanislaus' parishes.


I’m guessing I’m not the only one here with the following habit: when I’m bored, my hand will often reach down to my left pocket to take out my phone to distract me. Maybe it’s the right pocket or the purse for some of you, but I know this isn’t just a generational thing; I see people of all ages distracting themselves from boredom with their phones. Now either I’m sufficiently absent-minded or the habit is deeply enough engrained that a few weeks ago I was distracting myself with my phone and some website was taking long enough to load that I got bored and, without even thinking, my hand reached down to my left pocket, trying to grasp something that wasn’t even there that wouldn’t even have relieved what was wrong.



What I did wasn’t particularly harmful, but that posture – of trying to grasp something that really relieve what ails us – is the basic posture of so much sin. The original grasping was Adam and Eve reaching for the apple. But, that wasn’t the first sin, but the second. Adam and Eve had been made in the image and likeness of God, and their first sin was to doubt that. The serpent came and said to them, “Do you want to be like God? Then, reach out, take and grasp this thing, this apple?” If Adam and Eve had really believed that they were who God created them to be, that they were like God, they’ve have instantly rejected this as ridiculous. But, they didn’t. They reached out and grasped.

And we do this too. In fact, we’re mired in it. We live in fear and anxiety and doubt, doubting we are wonderfully and fearfully made, doubting that we are made like God, not in our power, but in our capacity for love. So, we grasp. We think that if we just grasp the right things, and hold on for dear life, we’ll find security. But, it’s never enough. That’s where jealousy comes from: when we think someone else has grasped more than us. That’s where pride comes from: when we think we’ve grasped more than them. That’s what makes it hard to be generous: because we fear that if we let go of what we’re grasping, we’ll be nothing. Well, we’re not nothing: we’re made in the image and likeness of God, not called to power, not called to security, but to risky, fragile open-handed love, the kind of love that doesn’t grasp, the kind of love that’s open-handed and in its open-handedness can receive gives that could never be grasped.

But God never gives up on us. God sent prophet after prophet to tell His people to stop grasping, to open their hands, to trust and to love. But it wasn’t enough. So, He sent His only son, to show us what divine love looks like with a human face, to show us that human weakness, human fragility is no contradiction to divine love. And just that, wouldn’t be enough either. So, he claims us anew in baptism. We, who were already His, have been claimed anew, have heard God declare, “This is my beloved daughter, this is my beloved son.” We have been filled with the Spirit, who dwells closer to us than we do to ourselves, prayers for us in sighs too deep for words, and keeps on acting to remind us who we are, and bring us closer to Christ.

In our gospel, we heard that Jesus’ relatives were some of the slowest to accept who he was. In another part of Mark’s gospel, we hear that it was precisely because he was too familiar that they couldn’t accept him as who he was, as divine love with a human face. And there’s a sure sign, that we’ve lost sight of being made in the image and likeness of God, that our neighbors are made in the image and likeness of God, that when we see someone who is too like us, we can’t see God in them.

At the end of the gospel, Jesus has something very important to say, that we only normally hear about two thirds of. He says that whoever does his word is his brother and sister and mother. And we normally hear about the first two thirds of that: that Jesus is our brother. And that’s amazing enough! That we have that closeness to Jesus, that we’re growing in family resemblance. But, we don’t hear the last part, that if we do Jesus’ word, we can become his mother.

That’s how bold God’s dream is for us, that all of us would follow Mary’s vocation. We know, some of you a lot more personally than me, that the life of a mother is nothing easy, is not always even safe. The life of a mother is a risky life, a loving life, in which a mother gives of her own body that another may have life. The life of the Christian is the same. To take up your cross and follow Christ is surely nothing easy, is a life of sacrifice. But, Jesus assures us that when we do his word, Christ takes on flesh anew.

That’s a bold dream for God to dream of us, but God’s dreams aren’t futile. We are made in the image and likeness of God, and we are called to act with an open-handed love, not grasping, and assured that when we do Christ himself takes on flesh in our actions. And we’re not perfect at this, sometimes we fail pretty spectacularly. But, God is never done with us. God is always acting to form us, to be more assured that we are like God and are called to move ever deeper into that life, to love like God. For in the end, freely choosing love forever, is precisely what heaven is. And that’s God’s great dream for us.


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