Today’s gospel (Matthew 5: 1-12) gives us so many criteria by which we can identify those who belong to God: happy are the poor in spirit, happy the gentle, happy those who mourn, happy those who hunger…In a way this is the counter agenda to so many of the values that prevail around us: happy are the successful, happy are the comfortably well off, happy are those who know how to look after their own interests first, happy are those who express themselves... Jesus’ criteria are self-effacing, turned towards God and neighbour; the counter proposals of the world are self-seeking, turned towards the self, even when ostensibly turned to others, like the people who limit their families so the children can “have everything”.
Yet, for all the tension between these two sets of values,
it is the last criterion of Jesus that is the most challenging for us. “Happy
are you when people abuse you and persecute you … Rejoice and be glad, for your
reward will be great in heaven.” It is not our nicer virtues that are the
deepest proof of where our hearts are turned. Anyone can be enthusiastic for
the pleasant or even the generous dimensions of the gospel - feeding the poor,
being a peacemaker, showing mercy: all the accolades that are given to secular
saints, as well as religious ones.
Yet, these qualities do not quite get to the roots of our heart. Ultimately,
the following of Christ grows out of an act in which we give ourselves totally
to God and wherein God becomes our joy. The fiat of sorrow, which we are
required to say in the face of persecution, comes out of the fiat of joy which
is the fruit of our love for Him. There where our hearts are, there will be our
treasure also. Jesus is not saying we should be happy because of the abuse, but
rather we have an additional cause to be happy when persecution comes and does
not rob us of what we treasure most… But what if it does?
Insofar as persecution takes our joy and robs us of peace, perhaps
that is the measure of how far we have to go yet before we are truly united to
Him; of how much we must long and pray for that union with him. If suffering bends us all out of shape and traumatises us, perhaps that is
because we are not yet fully surrendered to God and to the Father’s forming
action. We may think we love the people around us, but the people we really love
are those we refuse to be separated from, despite our suffering, despite what their love costs us. It is not
the suffering that reveals who we are, therefore, but the steadiness of our hearts when the
suffering comes: grace and joy under pressure, as we said in the last gospel
reflection.
And so, perhaps another gospel parable that illuminates
these Beatitudes is the story of the man who found a pearl in a field and went
away and sold everything he had to buy the field. We think too easily about the
pearl in this parable, of what a great pearl it must have been: literally a
pearler! But what lies on the other side of the parable – the untold story - is
everything the man sold in order to obtain the field with the pearl. What did he give up? What treasures
did this man part with to obtain that pearl? How angry was his wife that he was
selling up the family possessions? What a fool did his neighbours consider him?
How much pity did he endure from his drinking buddies?
But he had found the pearl of great price. The questions of those around him made no sense. The pearl - a symbol of union with God - was now, he realised, everything he could ever desire or need in this world.
The man was standing on a different horizon.
And so must we.
Happy are you when people abuse you and persecute you…for this is how the persecuted the prophets before you.
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