Prayer Requests and Gratitudes

Monday, September 3, 2012

Fury in the Temple

St. Gregory the Great, pray for us.
~~~ 1 Cor 2:1-5 ~~~ Psalm 119 ~~~ Luke 4: 16-30 ~~~
 
Paul acknowledges his weakness as a human,
"...I came to you in weakness and fear and much trembling..."
Even though Paul was convicted in mission to preach
he was careful not to assume credit for his messages.
Paul knew without a doubt that he was speaking the words from God.
 
He writes about his preaching
 "...with a demonstration of spirit and power,
so that your faith might rest not on human wisdom
but on the power of God..."
 
Sometimes I am envious of Paul and others
who were confident that they were being 
directly inspired from God himself.
Each day I just write from what comes into my heart
and can only hope that it is a tiny piece of God's inspiration.
I certainly attempt at being open to whatever he has to reveal.
 
The Gospel reading for today from Luke is the beautiful passage
of Jesus at home in the temple.
He is in the town of Nazareth where he grew up as a young child.
He went with the other men into the temple as was the custom.
He stood to read and was handed the scroll of the prophet Isaiah.
 
His eyes were drawn to this section...
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me

to bring glad tidings to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord."
 
While those present were impressed with his eloquent manner
of speaking they could not get past his background.
"Is this not the son of Joseph?"
 
We do not know much about Joseph the men of Nazareth
most likely knew him well.
Perhaps he had done carpentry work for them.
Why was he not with Jesus in the temple that day?
Could Joseph read?
There is so much about Joseph that we do not know.
But the comments filled with doubt about his abilities
indicate their surprise.
 
Jesus did not try to change their minds or argue with them in his defense;
he simply stated this fact...
"Amen, I say to you, no prophet is accepted in his own native place."
 
Jesus accepted this truth.
He did not let it stop him in any way.
I have often thought how sad it was for those who
lived with Jesus as he was growing up to not be able to believe
that he was the one.
He was the one the prophets had so frequently written about.
There he was standing, living in their midst and
 they were trapped by their traditional thinking.
 
I think we suffer this same entrapment more often than we realize.
That day Jesus goes on to give them numerous examples
of similar situations the prophets had experienced in years past.
 
For some reason this infuriated them. They were filled with fury.
Fury? What a strong word.
We think of fury being used to describe the mighty
ocean waves churning up the ocean waters.
Fury is extreme anger...wild and violent unrestrained anger.
Why did his words incite them so much that day?
What exactly did he say that struck such a strong response?
 
In fact they were so incensed that they were not only going to run him out of town. They were intending to force him over the cliff.
Their desire was to kill him that very day.
They had transitioned from being in awe of how he spoke
to believing
they would be better off if he were dead.
 
As it turns out we actually are better off with his death.
Of course they had no idea what his death
would cause for all of eternity.
 
 
Does it frighten you how quickly humans can change?
One minute you can be the 'golden child' and in the next
breath you can be banned from all contact with others.
We are so fickle at times.
When things are going our way God is great and all is well with the world.
When the tides change and things are not going so well
it takes real commitment
to keep believing that God is great.
It takes strong faith.
 
Some even resort to fury against God
for the unpleasant events in their life.
Dear Lord, help me to see you at work in my life
in spite of not having my way.

No comments:

Post a Comment