A recording of today's gospel and blog can be accessed here.
****
Today’s gospel (Luke 12:49-53) finds Jesus in one of His most contrary moods. This is the Jesus who turns over the table of the moneychangers. It is the Jesus who berates the Pharisees for their hypocrisies. It is the Jesus who simply refuses to open His mouth in the presence of Herod whom He calls at one point a ‘vixen’ (Luke 13:32); most English translations have it as ‘fox’ but the Greek indicates a female fox.
Yet why does He do this? Is He not the bringer of peace?
Does He not come to restore order, rather than to upset it? Does He not urge
His disciples to unity and love? Where comes this taste for upsetting the apple
cart or for flinging a bomb of controversy among the polite and well-respected denizens
of Palestine?
Perhaps He does this for one reason only: that only in God
are truth and unity mirror images of each other (along with goodness and
beauty). In everything else, multiplicity is the order of the day, and in
fallen humanity, multiplicity will also involve adversity and enmity: enmity
towards each other and enmity towards God.
But evil has developed strategies to counter the bad press
that comes from its divisions, and the chief of these is that all evil copies God.
Some saints refer to the devil even as the ape of God. Moreover, evil can only
be chosen under the appearance of good.
And this is why we must be cautious, not to say suspicious,
of all attempts to call evil good and good evil; of all attempts to make us
swallow a lie in the name of a truth. We are living in such an atmosphere right
now in which assisted suicide is renamed ‘assisted dying’ and murder is
rebranded ‘a woman’s right to choose’. Yet the relabelling can be even more
deceptive still. Any call for unity which sacrifices truth smacks of a compromise
from the devil’s own playbook. Sticking together even at the cost of truth and
goodness is not a Christian instinct; it is a demonic strategy, for as I said,
only in God are truth, goodness, and beauty the mirror images of unity.
Jesus’ solution for this dilemma is to be the sign of contradiction,
as Simeon prophesied (Luke 2:34), to cast fire upon the earth. His fire is not
the kind which destroys unless it is destroying sin. It produces not the kind
of smoke which blinds unless to confound the minds of God’s enemies. Rather, it
is a fire which warms, consoles and, yes, purifies: Our God is a consuming
fire, as St Paul writes to the Hebrews. Its smoke does not choke us but cures
and preserves the good in us, giving us the evangelical umami taste of the salt
of the earth.
Yet the cost of this can be quite high: Do you suppose
that I am here to bring peace on earth? No, I tell you but rather division,
says Jesus. Why is this? It is because division already exists and arises from
sin, from revolt against God. The world, shaped by original sin, is pulling
away from God. Jesus’ salvific mission is to counteract this gravitational
thrust towards hell, to bring humanity back within the orbit of heaven. And thus,
from now on a household of five will be divided: three against two and two
against three. It is not that Jesus wants the division; it is rather that He
knows the cost of reconciliation. He knows that, in the end, unity must be
governed by truth and follow the path of God’s order; not the deceitful order
that our wayward hearts want to impose on our lives.
It is easy to call evil good; we do it every day when we
sin. It is much more sinister to call good evil; God preserve us from such
falls. But only God is goodness right through, as St Thomas More tells us in A
Man for All Seasons. And this is why he will not bend to the will of Henry
VIII over his fake marriage; this is why he goes to his death, even at the cost
of seeming to be a traitor to his beloved king; even at the cost of hurting his
precious family – parting from them not forever but only for a time. For God
alone is goodness, truth, beauty, and unity bound together. He is our salvation
and our fulfilment, the fulfilment of all our desire.
Herod the Great had been afraid that this new king of the Jews would take his tinsel crown; had he but known that Jesus wanted to give him a crown of eternal bliss, he might not have destroyed the flower of a generation of Bethlehem’s children. What evil we can do under the appearance of good! Let us have the courage to choose the peace that Jesus offers, the true peace of God, even when it is a sign of contradiction in this wayward world.
No comments:
Post a Comment