Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Great Reward


Gospel: Mark 10: 28-31

The rich man has walked away sad.  Now Peter comes forward and says to Jesus: we've given everything up to follow you - what's the reward?  Peter has the same false expectation of Jesus as many others in his day.  He is thinking that Jesus is a political Messiah, so he figures that when Jesus restores the kingdom of Israel that he and the others will be rewarded with political power, riches, and influence.  For Peter and the others, that would make all this sacrifice worth it.

But Peter and many others are disappointed at Jesus' response.  The followers of Jesus will have many friends and families - and persecution.  It is the same outcome as Jesus had in this life, where he had no home of his own, but many welcomed him into their homes and tables, and of course the persecutions he received along the way, ultimately leading to his arrest, trial, and execution.  The servant cannot be greater than the master.  

Many have the same expectation as Peter, and many will not accept the answer of Jesus.  Instead, they will reinvent Jesus to be the political Messiah they so desire so that they may have the power, influence, and riches for which they pine.  They will have their reward.  Our task is to follow the Lord in every aspect of his life, accepting the same lot in life as he received.  The task of healing, liberating, and feeding others - the task of the towel and basin - is the mission of the disciple. 

Monday, May 25, 2026

Who Can Be Saved?


Gospel: Mark 10: 20-27

A wealthy young man asks Jesus: what must I do to inherit eternal life? Jesus quotes him the commandments, specifically those relating to our neighbor.  We are to avoid doing harm to others in all our actions, thoughts, and words.  The rich man states that he has kept all these - what more must I do?  Jesus gives him an answer he cannot accept: sell what you have, give to the poor, and follow Jesus along the way.  Several reasons exist for the young man's rejection of this invitation.

The young man was right in sensing that it is not enough to merely avoid harming others.  What he failed to realize was that in hoarding wealth he was in fact harming other people.  He was stealing from them and killing them.  When Jesus tells him to sell these riches and give to the poor, Jesus is merely having the man keep the commandments noted above.  The young man is asked to perform an act of simple justice, not extraordinary virtue.  

In every time and place the rich cannot accept this message.  So instead modern Christianity adapts itself to become a cult of the rich and powerful, a place where no burden or correction is placed upon the rich.  The commandments Jesus noted are thus riddled with loopholes like the tax code out of which the rich escape.  But some heroic souls will hear the call of Jesus - Francis of Assisi, Ignatius Loyola, Vincent de Paul - and give up their wealth to care for the poor, to fulfill justice, and be instruments of mercy and love as Jesus was.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

A Full Restoration


Gospel: John 20: 19-23

Easter to Pentecost represents the entire renewal of the world and the undoing of the archetypal sins of Genesis.  The sin of Adam and Eve represent sin as an offense against God.  The sin of Cain reflects the fact that sin harms other people.  The sin of Babel represents structural sin, while the story of Noah notes the cosmic dimensions that harm all of creation.  In the death and resurrection of Jesus and in the coming of the Spirit all these aspects of sin are overcome.

We saw earlier Jesus' crucifixion and burial scene in John: a tree, two streams, a man, a woman, and a garden.  The original innocence of Eden has been restored and made possible to us.  The sin of Adam is overcome.  At Pentecost we are restored to one another, we can understand one another again, and all of creation is made new by the wind of the Spirit that came across the earth that day, just as it had after the flood, just as it had at creation itself.  

But all of this is not magic.  It represents the fact that in and through the person of Jesus it is possible for us to live in such a way that we overcome and avoid these four aspects of sin.  By imitating the way of Jesus, by being open to the Spirit in our lives we can be renewed, as can all of creation.  The risen Jesus and the Spirit overcome our fears, break through our locked doors, and inspire us to be the mercy and love of God on earth as the Lord Jesus had been, proclaiming peace as he did.