Saturday, February 14, 2026

Checking Our Privilege


Gospel: Mark 8: 1-10

In today's Gospel portion, we see Jesus having compassion on the crowd that is hungry, while the disciples are indifferent to the hunger of the crowd.  We come to realize that the source of the disciples' indifference lies in the fact that they have food while no one else does.  They do not have empathy because they themselves are not and they have food.  And yet even though Jesus has access to food, he does have empathy for the crowd.  

Jesus asks the disciples to give him their food.  He multiplies it so that all now have access to food, and Jesus requires his disciples to give this food to everyone.  The disciples must have a direct encounter with those in need, and they must provide for those needs out of their own resources.  This is the fundamental mission of the Church, and Jesus continually calls us out of our lives of comfort to provide for a world hungry and starving.  

This feeding is twofold.  First, it is literal food for physical sustenance.  But it is also the food of the Eucharist that we are to provide for a hungry world as well.  For too long we have hoarded both of these things - the material wealth of the world and the gift of Eucharist and communion.  The Lord Jesus has multiplied both for us so that we might distribute it to all so that none go hungry either in body or soul.  He continually calls us to this work each and every day. 

Friday, February 13, 2026

Religious Grandstanding


Gospel: Mark 7: 31-37

Time and again in the Gospels Jesus tells people not to tell anyone about the miracle he has provided them in their lives.  In today's reading the injunction is even more pronounced: he strictly ordered them to tell no one.  But we always know better than Jesus.  Look at all the people following us!  And look at all the money coming in!  Look all we can do with it all, and look at all the influence we can have with such a large following!

That's exactly why Jesus told us not to tell anyone.  Jesus is utterly indifferent to the crowds, and quite often he is leery of them.  They - we - want to make him a king, but that is not what he is about.  And how often did Jesus condemn the love of money and reprimand the rich!  Money was also not something Jesus trusted.  And we are more likely to spend that money on episcopal palaces and private jets for the pastor than we would on care for the poor.  

If we are not willing to obey Jesus in this particular matter, in what other areas will we find ourselves in opposition to him?  If we put in our lot with the crowds and moneyed interests, we will find ourselves demeaning the poor and the marginalized; scapegoating immigrants, refugees, and migrants; justifying violence of every kind.  And we will create a twisted theology to justify all these things so that we might still call ourselves Christians...

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Healing the Stranger


Gospel: Mark 7: 24-30

Today's Gospel is shocking to us.  Jesus is approached by a woman asking him to expel the demon from her child.  The woman and child are foreigners, and Jesus treats her harshly.  He tells her that his own should be healed before any foreigners receive any consideration.  But she implores him, and eventually Jesus heals the child, liberating her from the demon that possessed her.  Jesus himself is changed by this encounter with this woman and her child.  

We often hear from Christians today about how a nation should take care of its own before helping foreigners, or how we should not help foreigners at all.  Leaving aside the fact that these same Christians would not want to help their own citizens either, this Gospel story challenges us in the same way it challenged Jesus.  Need is need regardless of who needs it.  Everyone is a child of God regardless of race or any other category.

This encounter with the Syrophoenician woman is a direct challenge to us today in our times.  Significant parts of the Christian world seek to make God's love ever narrower and exclusionary.  The entire panorama of salvation history and the Gospel suggest the exact opposite.  God continually calls us to an ever wider scope of love.  God continues to seek to dilate our hearts ever wider to care for all of humanity and not just one narrow corner of it.