If We Trust We Can Love
Saturday:
Eighteenth Week of the Year: August 6, 2016
Year II: Habakkuk 1:12 to 2:4; Psalm 9:8-13; Matthew 17:14-20
The Responsorial
Psalm calls us to a trust that transcends time: “You will never abandon those who seek you, Lord” (Psalm 9).
In our single reading from Habakkuk (1:12 to 2:4) God answers a question we keep asking throughout
history: “O Lord, how long shall I cry for help, and you will not listen? Or
cry to you ‘Violence!’ and you will not save?” (1:1). God’s answer is that we
should not ask “how long,” but trust him: “There is still a vision for the
appointed time; it speaks of the end, and does not lie. If it seems to tarry,
wait for it; it will surely come, it will not delay.” No matter how bad things
are, or how inactive God seems, we keep re-affirming our hope: “You will never abandon those who seek you,
Lord.”
In Matthew
17: 14-20 a man addresses the same question to Jesus specifically as a
Savior who is not saving: “Lord, have mercy on my son…. I brought him to your
disciples, but they could not cure him.” What is different in this story is
that the disciples are included. The father expected them to be able to heal.
And in fact, Jesus had sent them out with this power. “Then Jesus summoned his
twelve disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits, to cast them
out, and to cure every disease and every sickness.” 1
So why
have they failed?
Why do the disciples of Jesus seem to be failing
today? Why has the Church not been able to heal society of its compulsion to
keep destroying itself, throwing itself into “fire and water” by blind economic
practices that keep packing tight the powder keg of poverty all over the world
until it explodes in violence? Why have Christians not reformed the prison
system, which responds to crime with a simplicity so primitive it could be
called savage: just locking people in communal cages that become “universities
of crime”? Why do church-going supporters of the death penalty believe that by
killing those who kill they are showing respect for life? Why do we still
prefer to make war against those who hate and attack us instead of asking
ourselves (and them) what we are doing that makes them hate us so much? Why is
it that the same Church ministers who condemn so unconditionally politicians
who will not vote to make the sin of abortion a crime have been unable to keep
their own believers from committing it as a sin? Why do we who are urged
constantly to keep “changing our minds” through “repentance” (metanoia) prefer to demonize our enemies
with propaganda instead of searching our own souls?
Nevertheless, “Jesus rebuked the demon, and it
came out of the boy and he was cured instantly.” After this experience of God,
the disciples asked Jesus why they were unable to heal. He said, “Because you
have so little trust. If you have faith the size of a mustard seed… nothing
will be impossible for you.” We need to accept Jesus’ way of saving the world.
Then we will be able to show our society the power of God.
Initiative:
Give God’s life: Be a “priest in the Priest.” Be willing to lose your live to save it and save
others.
Footnotes:
1Matthew 10:1.
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