Gospel: Matthew 11: 25-27
Note carefully the encounters we have with the learned scholars in the Gospels. More often than not, we find them in the employ of the ruling powers who seek the ruin of Jesus and others for their own power. Scholars of the law advised Herod on the coming Messiah, taking part in his deeds of violence. In their interactions with Jesus, the scholars of the law are either in the employ of the Sadducees and Herodians, or among those seeking to justify themselves.
To be learned in itself is not bad, but how often is it used for nefarious purposes in support of the rich and powerful to the expense of the poor and marginalized. For this reason Jesus continually encourages us to a life of the simplicity of a child. A child has no power and continually open to learning and experiencing new things. Children have an inner world of imagination and possibility adults have lost long ago. The child is not a cynic or skeptic.
In seeking to be like children we remember that learning is for the sake of seeking wisdom and not power. Learning is a cultivation of the imagination, the openness to new experiences and possibility. Learning is for the service and care of others, not for being apologists and tools for the powers of this world. Today is a day for us to commit to this learning for wisdom, to remaining ever open to the voice of God within, and using our learning to serve and care for others.