“for God all things
are possible” (Mark 10:27)
Mark
10:17-34 (Year B: Trinity+19)
A
tough discourse...
So you thought that last
week’s discussion about divorce and remarriage tough. Following the gospel
of Mark, it gets tougher now with a discussion about poverty, riches and
wealth. The last thing we want to hear is another plea for belt-tightening
after all that (most) people have been through during the recent recession.
A man approaches Jesus, in this story, and asks for guidance
on what he needs to do to be saved. Living in a religious society of this time
people were very concerned about being on ‘the right side of God’ and making it
to the finishing line. Such a concern and anxiety was not uncommon until recent
times when religious observance and faith were very much central to people
especially on this island. Rich people or not so rich people went about doing
certain things – attending church, participating in the sacraments, giving to
charity, attending to their daily duties and family obligations and so on. It was commonly believed that a single person
or a young person might consider a ‘higher calling’ to follow a celibate
religious life and ‘renounce’ some of the normal attractions of living by
giving away their material possessions and following what are called the
evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity and obedience.
A question is asked by a man – a rich and young man at that
(drawing also on the gospel of Matthew). What must I do to be saved? The
response by Jesus is more radical and more subtle than we might gather on a
first reading of this story. The following may be asked or noted:
- What were the reactions of those around Jesus according to Mark’s version?
- The young man who made the request of Jesus was ‘shocked’ and went away ‘sad’. Why?
- The disciples on hearing Jesus’ words were ‘perplexed’ and then ‘greatly astounded’. Why?
- What is our reaction when we listen very carefully to the Word of God in today’s troubled world?
Hearing
the challenge afresh today...
Writing recently in The Furrow, Michael Paul Gallagher,
SJ, had the following to say:
Our excited society keeps us busy with trivia and incapable of pausing
to hear the cries of others
Are we falling into the same trap? Those cries for help may be thousands of
kilometres away on the borders of Hungary or they may be right next to us now.
Once again, we hear of more hardship and trouble for those
will follow Jesus unreservedly. Tagged on to this week’s story is the third
prediction of Jesus’ death and persecution. It will entail condemnation to
death, surrender to those who will mistreat us; mockery, physical attacks and
ultimately death. This type of scenario may seem remote to us in the comforts
of Northern Europe. But, we increasingly reminded of the fragility and
persecution awaiting people on grounds of religion, ethnicity, class, sexual
orientation or simply because they do not fit with the agenda of those who
wield power. In the coming years millions will seek refuge in Europe as
conditions deteriorate in the neighbouring continents due to war, famine,
fanaticism and the slow, gradual asphyxiation of climate change. We are living
on borrowed time on this sick planet as some hoard possessions and power to the
detriment of others. The message of
Jesus has never been so relevant to us today.
The problem is not wealth in itself but whether we see and
use wealth as ‘our’ possession or something to be used for others – for those
we love most closely and to whom we are bound by commitments and those in our
communities and world.
The rich man sought perfection in the doing of the Law. Jesus’ answer, as recounted in both Mark and
in Matthew, draws his attention (and of those listening on) to the horizontal
or social or inter-personal aspect of the law – to respect our parents, to bear
no hatred against others, to be faithful to our commitments, to be truthful and
honest and so on. In other words the key to the first three commandments is
through loving our neighbour – our real flesh and blood neighbour in the here
and now – next to us in the present moment of life and beside us under the same
roof, on the street, on a train etc. Therein lies perfection in the Law. But, the young man wanted more than this
perfection and Jesus gave him a different kind of perfection challenge – let go
of everything you cling to in life meaning honour, status, perks, comforts and
follow me. In other words we can follow a perfect way by obeying the ‘don’ts’
as outlined in the 10 commandments. But, we can also obey the ‘do’s’ by giving
away all that we have – life, attachments and clinging to power – and follow
Jesus with our whole heart.
A
literal call for some..
Many have interpreted this literally and such an impulse
gave rise to movements into the ‘desert’ associated with monastic life. In a
way the monastic life that sprung up in the early centuries were protest
movements at a time when Christianity was about to go native in Rome and attain
to a position of social respectability in a coalition of influence, power and
preferment. Some might suggest that Christianity is still trying to recover
from this great fall!
And a
calling to all of us here and now..
Many are those who felt a call to not only go into the
desert but to go into the streets and byways where people live and toil among
the poor, the oppressed and the marginalised. Not everyone has this call – at
least not for a lifetime. But, everyone has an opportunity to grow in love
where they are planted. Every deed, every commitment and every initiative has
meaning from the smallest to the heroic.
Moreover, love of the poor which is so evident throughout the gospels
and the Bible demands not just ‘charity’ in the sense that this term has come
to be used, but a thorough analysis and effective social action to address the
roots of poverty, injustice and oppression. We do well to read and hear, again,
the prophet Amos (5:10-12)
who speaks about inequality, oppression and neglect of fundamental human rights
in his day. The worship of money and the oppression of the poor makes a mockery
of worship because God is specially on the side of the poor and the oppressed.
This is what Matthew was on about in chapter
25:31-46 of that gospel when he outlines what matters at the end of our
lives. And the prophet Amos (8:4-6)
wasn’t mincing his words in this passage:
Hear this, you that trample on the needy,
and bring to ruin the poor of the land, saying, “When will the new moon be over
so that we may sell grain; and the sabbath, so that we may offer wheat for
sale? We will make the ephah small and
the shekel great, and practice deceit with false balances, buying the poor for
silver and the needy for a pair of sandals, and selling the sweepings of the
wheat.
Discipleship
that is awake to the politics of oppression..
Do the warnings of Amos carry relevance in today’s world and
in today’s churches? Have we focussed
too much on sex and not enough on social justice? And do we console ourselves and our
consciences with ‘charity’ when those who are oppressed need to be liberated
and need to take ownership of the means of their economic emancipation? Is our
religion in conformity with biblical values of social justice, compassion and
practical assistance? Do we know what poverty is really like? Have we ever had
the experience of not being able to pay rent or mortgage, skipping meals, lighting
candles when the electricity has been cut off for non-payment of a bill and
facing the embarrassment of not being able to send a child on school trip?
Poverty takes many forms and many were surprised to find
themselves in poverty when their job was lost or their business folded up
following the credit crunch and economic downturn of 2008-2010. Still others,
live in a cycle of inter-generational poverty which seems extremely difficult
to break out of.
It seems to me that the debate around ‘welfare reform’ in
many European countries including the UK and Ireland has been shaped more by 19th
century notions of deserving poor and philanthropic benevolence with an
increasingly mean state that works to defend the interests of corporations,
bond-holders and well-to-do citizens than those who have nobody to speak for
themselves and are not the subject of pre-electoral competition for votes.
Witness the global trend towards ever lower taxes on the high-income and
high-worth citizens, on corporations while increasing numbers live in
precarious living conditions where work, income and pensions are less secure
than ever. This is not to deny the huge improvements in living standards,
health and education that have occurred in the last 100 years. However, there is
another side to the story of global capitalism that people concerned about
social justice and sustainable development need to start caring about much more.
And
it is never too late to start (again)..
We might be near the end of our days bedridden and highly
dependent but we can continue to follow Jesus on the road to freedom by showing
interest in everyone around us and by prayer.
Who knows? Our loving, our hoping and our living in this way may be
generating new love, new hope and new life in those near and far.
Some day we might wake up and see the world around us and
the ‘smell the roses’. For that to happen we need to approach the throne of
grace on our knees like the rich young man with one crucial difference – with
God nothing is impossible.
Time and time again God works in our lives not according to
our timetables or plans but in his way. The social and political become
personal and the personal becomes political. We are made for communion in a
broken world. If we trust we will find
surprise after surprise as God meets us in places of unbelievable tenderness
and compassion. But, we must know that the way of discipleship leads through
much suffering and difficulty as Jesus made clear to the disciples who still
didn’t get it. Do we get it?
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