OT XXIII- Wis 9:13-18b; Phlm 9-10, 12-17; Lk 14:25–33
Jesus said to
the great crowds, “If anyone comes to me without hating his father and mother,
wife and children, brothers and sisters, and even his own life, he cannot be my
disciple. Is Christ telling us to hate the very people we should love the most?
No. In ancient Palestine, figures of
speech were often vivid. The more important the point, the more vivid the
image. For example when Christ says: “If your hand causes you to sin, cut it
off,” he’s not saying that every person who’s ever stolen a cookie from the
cookie jar should start amputating body parts. He is saying that we need to be
radical in our fight against sin. If a certain situation or place or person is
always leading us away from God, he wants us to have the courage to renounce
that situation or place, and put healthy boundaries with that person.
Unless we
love Jesus more than we love our families, we can’t really follow him. And if
we value our own life and our own comfort more than we love Him, we’re not
going to be able to experience the joy of a deep friendship with him. Christ
gives us to key to loving him above all else: it means letting go of our
possessive love.
Just as a
tower builder needs to have enough in the budget for materials and as a general
to win a war needs to have enough well-trained troops to defeat his opponents,
so we, to be followers of Christ need to know the sufferings that keeping this
commitment will demand. Perhaps these parables also illustrate that
discipleship is not a one-time decision and that the commitment involved needs
to be an ongoing decision to persevere in the ministries that are integral to
following Jesus. When we first decide to follow Christ, we know simply
that there will be a price to pay. Only as life unfolds can we begin to
assess the full cost.
When Jesus
says: “Anyone of you who does not renounce all his possessions cannot be my
disciple”, he’s not saying that everyone should run off and sell their homes
and cars right after Mass. We have a responsibility to others, and we need to
use the gifts of God wisely. He is, however, calling us to give up our
possessive, hoarding attitude towards material possessions and towards others. He’s
inviting us to carry our crosses by renouncing our possessions for the infinite
gain of loving him above all things
Jesus
asserted in the Sermon on the Mount: “No one can serve two masters; for he will
either hate the one and love the other or be devoted to the one and despise the
other. You cannot serve God and mammon” (Mt 6:24). He cannot stand halfway between both sides. He
has to decide and show his commitment.
The four
conditions of discipleship as outlined by Jesus in this gospel indicate a kind
of total commitment that every follower of Christ should be prepared to live.
The radical demands of Jesus call us to center our lives on the suffering and
risen Christ.
Taking up
our own cross does not mean seeking out suffering. Jesus did not seek out his
cross; he took on himself, in obedience to the Father, what men put on his
shoulders, and with his obedient love, he transformed it from an instrument of
torture into a sign of redemption and glory. Jesus did not come to make human crosses
heavier, but rather to give them meaning. It has been rightly said that
“whoever looks for Jesus without the cross will find the cross without Jesus,”
that is, he will certainly find the cross but not the strength to carry it.
Though “bearing a cross” is often equated with welcoming chronic illness,
painful physical conditions, or trying family relationships, it also includes
what we do voluntarily, as a consequence of our commitment to Jesus Christ.
Further, it is the spirit in which we freely and deliberately accept and
endure the pain, the difficulties, and even the ridicule involved with these
choices, that transforms them into real cross-bearing. We need to be prepared
to suffer out of love for Jesus.
Real
discipleship demands true commitment to the duties entrusted to us by life,
circumstances, the community, or directly by God Himself, and by loving acts of
selfless, humble, sacrificial love offered to all God’s children around
us. Let us remember that all this is possible only if we rely
on the power of prayer and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Today Christ
will come in Holy Communion to strengthen us once again, so that we
can continue bearing our crosses with faith and hope. This week,
let's share that strength with someone who needs it. Let's take
a share of a neighbor's cross, just as Christ has taken a share
of ours.
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