So when
Jesus sensed that this kind of thinking was going on, He spoke about a prophet
not having honor in his native place, and then gave them examples about how God
works outside of human boundaries: in Elijah helping a widow outside of Israel
[1 Kings 17:7-24], and Elisha cleaning a leper from Syria [2 Kings 5:1-19]. Then the people got indignant. I can imagine them saying to themselves, “Who
does he think he is, saying things like that?” And they got so mad, they try to kill Him!
Before we
look down our noses at the people from Nazareth though, don’t we at times have
similar thoughts and feelings towards others? Have you never said to yourself, “Who does
he/she think he/she is, telling me what to do?” Are we not at a time in the U.S., and in other
parts of the world, for that matter, that it doesn’t matter how reasonable, or
even right it may be, we instantly reject what’s being said from the other
side? Isn’t this what white supremacists
do? For them, the only things that are
worth anything are the things that come from white people. They can’t conceive of anyone else having as many
gifts and talents and worth as they. Isn’t
this also characteristic of clericalism in the church, where the leaders
determine somehow that lay people are to be seen and not heard? And if I, as a citizen of the U.S., convince
myself that only the U.S. matters and that the only good way of doing things is
the “American way” of doing things, have I not fallen into the same trap? I can take pride in my country and still be
humble enough to know that we can learn from others.
Even before
Jesus, as we’ve seen in the examples to which Jesus referred, it’s been shown
that God works outside of the boundaries and barriers that we human beings
construct among ourselves. And in what
we see from the Gospels, Jesus reached out to those beyond Israel, and to
people beyond what conventional wisdom or piety within Israel, dictated He
should reach out to.
Why would
God act that way? Why would Jesus give
us such a model to follow? We have a
very eloquent answer in St. Paul’s treatise on love [1 Corinthians 12:31-13:13].
When we get righteously indignant and
believe that we’re standing up for what’s right, but we do it without love, we’re
really standing up for nothing. Love
takes no pleasure in the destruction of anyone, but in the rise of justice and
peace for all.
It’s true
that the world is already accustomed to turning a deaf ear to the promotion of
life, to the need for reconciliation, to the perspective of people of faith,
but we can’t let that deafness lead us away from love. Otherwise, we have no possibility of being
heard.
If we
believe in the meaning of the Cross and of the empty tomb; if we believe in
God’s desire to heal us and reconcile us and redeem us, then we’re called to
love as Jesus loves. We’re called to be
open to where the Holy Spirit leads us, even if it means crossing the barriers
that exist between people. People may
not be willing to hear. The leaders in
Jeremiah’s time didn’t [Jeremiah 1:4-19]. The people in Nazareth who heard Jesus weren’t.
And
those who benefit from the status quo will not. But just as God promised Jeremiah, God will be
with us.
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