Rejection
Can Be A Sign
SATURDAY, Easter week five: April 30, 2016
Though
both readings speak of opposition to the Gospel and persecution, the Responsorial verse tells us: “Let all the earth cry out to God with joy”
(Psalm 100). The truth is that
people’s rejection of the Church can be a sign that we are truly united with
Jesus, the “stone that the builders rejected,” who “has become the cornerstone”
(1Peter 2:7). Anything that indicates
we have “died with Christ” to the attitudes and values of this world is an
assurance that we have also “risen to new life in him” (Entrance Antiphon). This is a cause to rejoice.
In Acts 16: 1-10 we see Paul subjecting
Timothy to the unnecessary pain of circumcision in order to make his ministry
acceptable to Jews who were still locked into the law. We know that the Apostles
were ready to endure persecution for preaching the Gospel (see Acts 4; 18-33; 14: 8, 19-21), but still
the “Holy Spirit prevented them” from preaching in some places — presumably
because God knew they would not be accepted there. Christians neither seek
persecution nor let it deter them; they simply follow the Holy Spirit without
regard for consequences. This is the guiding principle behind prophetic
witness. Whether we are accepted or rejected, praised or persecuted, “Let all the earth cry out to God with joy”
(cf. Philippians 1: 12-22; 2Timothy
4: 1-9).
In John 15: 18-21 Jesus tells us that
being rejected by people can be a sign we are united to Christ: “If the world hates
you, be aware that it hated me before it hated you. If you belonged to the
world, the world would love you as its own. Because you do not belong to the
world, but I have chosen you out of the world--therefore the world hates you.”
There
could be other reasons for rejection, of course. Christians — and more commonly
clerics, because of their public status and high visibility — might be hated
because of their arrogance, injustice or hypocrisy. Peter warns the early
Christians: “Let none of you suffer as a murderer, a thief, a criminal, or even
as a mischief maker. Yet if any of you suffers as a Christian, do not consider
it a disgrace, but glorify God because you bear this name” (1Peter 4:14-16). As prophets, we are not trying to draw attention to ourselves by
getting ourselves stoned (civil disobedience is a separate issue); we are just
trying to live out the message of Jesus authentically. And no matter how people
respond to it, we will persevere in peacefulness and in love. As long as we are
united to Christ, whether in his suffering or in his glory, “Let all the earth cry out to God with joy.”
Initiative: Be a prophet. Bear
witness to the Resurrection
by living the Gospel fearlessly, regardless of consequences.
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