When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Are we gonna talk or are we gonna fish?


“Invest this until I get back.”

So much of who we are and what we are called to do is contained in this brief line in the parable of the talents. (Luke 19:11-28)  We are called and gifted.  All that we have – all that we are – we have as “gift,” given to us for a very special purpose. 

The contrast Jesus uses is amazingly contemporary and is very helpful for our everyday lives.  Jesus does not want us to take what we have been given and simply preserve it – to protect the gifts, out of some fear, in a risk-free way.  Jesus wants us to “invest” our gifts – to take some risk, in order to grow the value of His investment in us.

In many ways, the message of Jesus is very counter-cultural.  We resist, even though we know the truth of what Jesus says, from so many examples in life – muscles grow when we use them and they atrophy when we don’t use them.  In our self-absorption culture, we are often discouraged from taking personal risks.  We are often told – in hundreds of direct and subliminal ways – that we should always choose what will keep us “healthy.”  Personal sacrifice – even for a greater good – is not always seen as good for me, and is therefore to be avoided.  Being “stretched,” denying myself, serving the needs of others before my own, suffering greatly to stay faithful to a commitment, giving myself away in love, are all viewed with suspicion in a culture adverse to self-risk.

Jesus frees us.  The One Who has given us the gifts we have will give us even more.  However, even in the spiritual life, the “rate of return” is directly related to “the amount of risk” we take.  Jesus stimulates our desires with this parable, stirring in us a confident desire to make better use of the gifts He has given us, by risking more and more to invest them for a higher rate of return.

Each of us today can go through our day, asking if we are being “overly cautious” with the gifts that have been given us.  We can ask how much energy we are expending on avoiding risk, and how “tired” we are, from protecting ourselves.  We can imagine ways to take a gift we have and use it to love more, listen more deeply, do something more self-sacrificing, offer forgiveness, and/or spend some time for others we’d otherwise use on ourselves.  And, at the end of the day, feeling some of the fatigue that comes from being stretched, we can look at the summary of our investments for the day, and give thanks.

I am reminded of an old joke:

Two old friends, Jack and Ralphie, go fishing all the time.  Ralphie calls Jack and tells him he has discovered the best method for catching fish ever - "It's indisputable!" he tells his buddy. But, he won't disclose his secret find to Jack.  "I'll see ya Saturday at the boat.  You just be there!"

Saturday morning arrives and they're out there on the lake.  It's a beautiful day already on a cool, but soft morning.  Jack is all fired up to find out what Ralphie has come up with.

Ralphie opens his tackle box, picks out a hand grenade, shows a dumb-founded Jack, pulls the pin, and throws the grenade overboard.  BOOM!  Water everywhere!  And, the fish just bob to the surface.  While Jack sputters and fumes, Ralphie calmly scoops out the fish in his net.  "You can't do that, Ralphie!  You'll be arrested.  If I had half a mind, I'd arrest you right now, in fact."

Meanwhile, Ralphie picks out another grenade, pulls the pin, hands it to Jack and say, "You gonna talk or you gonna fish?"

So, are we gonna talk or are we gonna fish?

Lord, God, help me to live out the message of Jesus in my life.  Help me to know that You are offering me the gift of Christ’s own life when You invite me to experience the death and the resurrection in my life.  Help us all, especially in these troubled times, to seek the hope that is imbedded in the Paschal Mystery.  Be with us in our radical understanding and living of the message of Your Son, Jesus Christ.

Immaculate Heart of Mary
Pray for us now and at the hour of our death
My prayer intentions for today are for those who are tempted by the all glitter of today’s society; that they may be able to resist the temptation to sin and instead choose the course that will lead them closer to Christ.

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