A recording of today's gospel and blog can be accessed via this link.
*****
Today’s gospel (Luke 7:1-10) is full of movement. There is
the movement of the Jewish elders who bring to Jesus the message from a Roman
centurion that his servant is in need of healing. There is Jesus’ movement,
walking in the direction of the centurion’s residence. There is the movement of
the belated messengers, who intercept Jesus on the way with a message whose
sentiments so inspired the early Church that they became an integral part of
the Eucharistic liturgy: I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof
. And indeed, the movement of Jesus’ heart, elated by the faith of this gentile.
All these movements are in a way redolent of the movement that the centurion himself
goes through as he passes from his Roman religion to faith in the living
Christ.
When he begins that journey, his religion is one of exchange
and trade, like so many religions in which people entered into a kind of
commercial arrangement with the gods. Before we get too snooty about such a
pragmatic form of religion, we should of course recall that we are all too
prone, consciously or unconsciously, to indulge in our own kind of trade with
God – for what we will or will not do for Him if He does this or that for us. Accordingly,
it is entirely possible that the centurion’s building of the local synagogue
was done in this frame of mind, a barter with the local deity, although of
course it is also possible that paying for the synagogue to be built was a
hearts-and-minds operation – a Roman way of trading for the goodwill of the
local people. One cannot always rule over others simply by force.
So, how, we wonder, did his journey in faith begin? Did he
find in his trade with Jupiter and Mars some kind of preparation for the
gospel? Did the bartering of slaughtered animals and grains of incense with the
gods of the Roman imagination bring him, as it were, some sense of the God who
really did exist? Some say that all religions are a path to God but in the case
of this Roman centurion, it is his military experience that provided a pattern
through which he could understand the empire of the God of all gods. For he
understood authority like an officer who says ‘go’ to one and he goes: the
docility of lower powers to higher powers. This was the message that was
brought to Jesus by the second group of emissaries the centurion sent, probably
after pacing the floor of his house wondering how his first message would be
received. If, at the beginning of this faith journey, he was still remotely interested
in the free trade of favours between the heavens and the earth, as its conclusion
approached, he was persuaded by a faith that had given birth to humility, to a very
un-Roman sense of indignity: Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter
under my roof, nor indeed even to loosen the strap of His sandal.
The importance of the centurion in a theological sense is
that he was a gentile. The centurion foreshadows the fact that the terms of the
new covenant that Jesus was about to write in His blood would also encompass the
Roman world and beyond. But such theology holds the deepest spiritual significance
for us because this Jesus, who brings peace and justice but not as the world
dreams of them – indeed, not really as any other religion dreams of them – this
Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. It was not by becoming more deeply
pious within the frame of his Roman religion that the centurion approached God,
although his Roman sense of order and indeed virtue perhaps placed him and
others a step ahead of some cultures. The seeds of the Word fall where they
will, even among the violent structures of a humanly almighty military power.
Jesus rejected the advances of Herod Antipas and tongue lashed the Pharisees,
but he welcomed two sets of messengers from a bloody Roman occupier. In this
gospel, we see more faith in Jesus emerging paradoxically from a culture of furious
force and cruelty than from all the pompous pieties and deceptive doctrines of
a thousand panjandrums. Our centurion glimpsed the kingship of Christ through the
machinery of an Empire that the centurion had thought was above all others.
O Mary, teach us to say ‘yes’ with the centurion to the
empire of Jesus, the reign of the Father and the Spirit with Him, over our hearts,
our community, and our country.
No comments:
Post a Comment