The last words of the Gospel I
reflected on today are a wonderfully consoling piece of news. “I came not to call the
righteous, but sinners.” [Mark
2:13-17]
In all our struggle for perfection,
doing the ‘right thing,’ working hard to please God, and in general focusing way
too much on ourselves and our efforts, the simple words from Mark’s gospel puts
it all in perspective. I’m a sinner; God
loves me and continues to call me into life, and that’s the simple and most
beautiful truth of it all! But how easy
it is to end up on the side of the ‘righteous’ and then not really be able to
hear the call!
How incredibly attractive Jesus must
have been in calling disciples to Him. Jesus
simply said to Levi the Son of Alpheus, “Follow me” and Levi left the tax-collecting desk and
followed Jesus. The tax collectors were
in many ways the ‘lowest of the low’.
They represented the foreign power of Rome as well as the general
tendency to skim off the top of their collections and thus they were not easy
to like.
But Jesus went to Levi as He had gone
to Peter and James and John to offer them discipleship [Luke 5:1-11]. Were these men ‘righteous?’ Certainly not of their own accord. However, they were afforded the opportunity
of great growth by following in the footsteps of Jesus. How well did they do this? Knowing the rest of the story, we know that
they finally understood the call only after Jesus’ death and resurrection. Up until then they remained slow and plodding
in their discipleship.
How about us? The truth is that what makes us at all good
is not our attempts at goodness and righteousness, but the very fact that we’ve
been called into discipleship ourselves by our Baptism. The strength for living out the implications
of that Baptism comes from the Lord who calls us not just once, but on a
day-by-day basis.
Jesus, show me how to be tuned in to Your
call as it comes to me each day. Help me
to grow in the Spirit by responding to the call. Bless all of us with the realization of Your
presence in our lives and how to keep responding to Your call to us as Your
disciples. Thank You for the call.
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