A recording of today's gospel and reflection will be posted later.
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Today’s
gospel (Matthew 13: 54-58) recounts an episode in which Jesus visits Nazareth
and finds the population sceptical about His ministry. Where did this
man get his wisdom and these mighty works? they wonder. Their
questions come thick and fast, and before long the mood grows dark: They
took offence at him. Jesus’ response to this precipitous judgement was
philosophical but also practical. A prophet is not without honour
except in his home town, He concluded, and He performed few miracles for
them, the gospel says, because of their unbelief.
Sometimes,
human beings are sunk simply by their own shortcomings. Here is Nazareth, the
neediest of Israel’s villages, well known as a place of dishonour. And yet,
instead of celebrating their local celebrity, the people were filled with
scepticism at Jesus’ works. Was it not right to ask questions? Of course, it
was. Was it not a normal requirement to discern well in such circumstances?
Without a doubt. So, why did the Nazarenes go so wrong in the process?
The clue
might be found in this gospel’s subtext, what lies beneath the surface. Where
did this man get his wisdom? only appears to be a
fair inquiry. Yet behind it is a kind of jealous attack. It is not Jesus’
wisdom that they were inquiring about. They were reacting instead to the very
fact of it, like neighbours who react and say: have you seen what the Jones’s
have done now? After that first question, therefore, every other inquiry was an
attempt to demean the Messiah in their midst: Is not his mother called
Mary? Are not his brothers James and Joseph and Simon and Judas? Yet
again, we must read the subtext, the thing that lies beneath the surface: these
questions were rhetorical, not genuinely interrogative. They were not about
what they were about. They did not seek information. Rather, they sought to
make the point that whatever Jesus had done, He was simply a local boy and
didn’t deserve the acclaim. And there is the wayward human heart in a nutshell,
souring like milk in the warm summer sun.
Jesus
cannot heal us until we have fully recognised how broken we are, but we cannot
fully recognise how broken we are when we are jealously comparing ourselves to
others. The crowd’s questions almost amount to asking: why should we
not be just as renowned as Jesus? Jealousy manifests itself in
different ways; in the impious, it is simple, raw, and aggressive, as it is in
this scene. In the pious, it might show itself through flattery or imitation or
in an ill-disguised competitiveness for heavenly glory. But both categories of
people are moved by the same force from within, the same instinct to want to
show that they are as good as the one they are jealous of, or at least that
those they are jealous of are no better than them. Perhaps it is because they
do not know their own worth for only those who neglect their worth in God’s
eyes look upon the qualities of others as a measure of their own failings.
But what is
the measure of who we are, of what we are to become, and indeed of what we are
worth? Are these things not determined by our vocation: our personal
vocation, calling us to be our very own reflection of the goodness and
beauty of our divine Creator, and our life’s vocation, calling us
to some particular path of living? Instead of finding our guide in these two
realities, we often allow who we are and what we are worth to be shaped by so
many other forces in the human game of inauthenticity: by social pressures –
the kind that the crowd try to exert in this gospel – or by covetous pursuit
when we run towards not what God calls us to be but towards the thing that most
seems attractive to us: wealth, fame, influence. Instead of vocation, we seem
to aspire to self-promotion. But the truth is that we are least ourselves when
we most wish to seem and to grab.
Nazareth of
Our Lord’s day is the anti-culture of vocation: it is not interested in hearing
God’s call, nor in honouring God’s call in others. To dwell spiritually in the
Nazareth of England in the living holy house of the heart, proposes another
way.