Aug 31, 2024 Written by 

For a transparent Coexistence

Jesus and the mania for ruling

Lk 6:39-42 (39-45)

 

 

"How much our human family needs to learn to live together in harmony and peace without all being equal!" (Pope Francis FT no.100).

 

To live fraternally and wisely, it is not enough to be together in twos, threes, tens or more: we could be like so many blind people who do not know how to dwell with themselves.

In such a case, relationship life becomes outward and can become empty - just full of judgement: taxing, obstinate and pedestrian.

Then resentment arises within, at being forced into a manic space that does not correspond to us.

The inevitable malaise begins to decline if and when the very person who co-ordinates the group or the company lives its being close with extreme modesty, with a sense of its own boundaries.

The Way of the Spirit is in fact a vocational initiative-response to the need for authentic guidance.

Authentic pastors only help when they question themselves before others, when they do not remain entangled in an exercise of vacuous indoctrination and moralism that exacerbates souls and irritates.

Thus, the inner Friend who infallibly leads souls is indeed meant to be reflected in the 'teachers' - but to the extent that they introduce us to encounter ourselves and the wisdom of Scripture (more willingly than to indulge in our own megalomaniac pursuits).

Commenting on the Tao xxix, Master Ho-shang Kung points out (of those who want to be rulers of the world):

"He wants to rule creatures by action. In my opinion he will not succeed, for the Way of Heaven and the hearts of men are clear.

The Way of Heaven [Perfection of Harmony] detests confusion [concerning one's own nature, spontaneously expressed] and impurity [artifice], the human heart detests too many lusts.

 

The ancient chosen people found themselves hard of heart, lost and without a horizon, because they were misguided by fiscal and earthy religious leaders.

Their obtrusive and contrived blindness was the concrete downfall of the destiny and quality of life of the entire nation.

Jesus appeals to the apostles so that his assemblies of the naive, humble and bewildered would not come to the same end - because of a lack of righteousness on the part of community leaders.

The latter - if inebriated with self-satisfaction - sometimes instead of humanising, promoting and cheering up the existence of the common people, willingly suffocate it with minutiae and deviate towards nothingness.

The Lord absolutely does not want the animators of his fraternities to allow themselves the luxury of making themselves superior to others and masters of the truth. Gospel truth is not something one has, but something one does.

 

The Master is not one who gives lessons: he accompanies his students and lives with them; he does not limit himself to manners.

He does not teach various subjects, etiquette, mannerisms, good manners: rather, he transmits the living and global Person of Christ - even that without etiquette - not depersonalising the disciple.

In short, the Risen One is not just an example to be imitated, a model that makes one take on commitments and minutiae, a founder of an institute, of a targeted ideology, or of religion (grammar, doctrine, style and discipline).

In Jesus we are called to identify ourselves - not 'by ear', nor by copying. Faith itself is a multifaceted relationship.

It impels us to reinterpret Christ in a new way; each of us in correlation with the history of life, new situations, events, cultural emergencies, sensitivities, the genius of the time.

It is the direct and personal experience of the Father as advocated by the Son. Conquest that upsets puerile, worldly or customary measures.

Scarcity and appropriation that allows us to recklessly grasp ourselves already redeemed, to pass from darkness to light without conditions or hammering.

 

That of the Lord is Light, fruit of the unprecedented and strong Action of the Spirit.

Intuition of the signs and Virtue that overcomes the disorientation of every misguided, if captive of opinions, petty things, solitary selfishness and otherwise.

Unexpected energy that nevertheless comes into play even through the swampy situations it feels to react to; and becomes regenerating power, unexpected life (of the saved already here and now).

Christ also calls for an inventive attitude in presenting oneself to one's brother - without preconceived, asphyxiating, morbid or cerebral schemes and codicils; without perhaps, just to welcome. 

An openness that is almost impossible if community ministers remain distracted or are already calibrated - thus unnecessarily rigid towards others.

They would then remain punctilious, more impatient than the pagan God they still have in their bodies and heads.

 

All of us, freely restored, have indeed been called by Name: in a special way - and to guide our brothers and sisters on fundamental options. As expert guides of the soul and intensity of relationship.

Not commanders and rulers without the possibility of reciprocation: but bread, support, nourishment, a shining sign of the Lord, a prod in favour of the lives of others.Church leaders must be very special points of reference and hinges of whimsical, regenerating communion - from which the persistence and tolerance of a superior power of reciprocity shines through.

The eye of the believer in Christ remains limpid and luminous because he finds ingenious Friends who introduce him to confront and reflect himself not with external and induced models (by opinions or intentions), but with the Word.

 

Conditioned by the bombardment of the 'external society' or by trivial vested interests, the same spiritual guide can on the contrary lose creative discernment.

Thus the old man reattaches himself, bound by short-lived hopes; so many petty and negligible trifles - finally he becomes "blind" again.

The kingdom of darkness unfortunately includes not only myopic, farsighted or astigmatic people, but above all those who see 'far' (as they say) but not the people before their eyes.

More quick-witted and organised than others, they take matters into their own hands.

For a long time, things in their company seem pleasant, but as they have no deep roots, they ultimately ruin the fate of the unwell.

They organise events or festivals, instead of upgrading from within, and sing the authentic song of a full, happy life for all.

 

Beyond the faults of sight, beware also of the 'measure': we are not called upon to become good-natured and impeccable gentlemen, nor are we called upon to become slightly more circumspect and 'concrete' renunciates.

All these are already old failures, which do not look the present in the face and do not open up the future.

We have received as a Gift the Mission to build the world in the Risen One, who unleashes power and divine sparkle: radically new heavens and a radically new earth, even in our searches.

Let alone dwell on the "straws".

In short, by grace, guidance, propulsive orientation and action, the genuine Action of vital Providence moves us away from the lordship of ancient superstructures ["beams" in the eye].

With such personal baggage, one can also become a companion to a humanity that is no longer alienated, but enabled to breathe beyond the usual fervoursome... that incite trifles.

Despite our shortcomings, guided and blessed by the great Master and his Word in the Spirit, it will be our desire for the fullness of life, broad and complete, that will not make us lose sight of our sacred Oneness in the world.

 

 

 

Beams and Straw, Mole and Fruit

 

The encyclical Fratelli Tutti invites us to a prospective gaze, which provokes decision and action: a new eye, filled with Hope.

It "speaks to us of a reality that is rooted in the depths of the human being, regardless of the concrete circumstances and historical conditioning in which he lives. It speaks to us of a thirst, of an aspiration, of a yearning for fullness, for a fulfilled life, of a measuring oneself against what is great, against what fills the heart and lifts the spirit towards great things, such as truth, goodness and beauty, justice and love. [...] Hope is bold, it knows how to look beyond personal comfort, the small securities and compensations that narrow the horizon, to open up to great ideals that make life more beautiful and dignified" (n.55; from a greeting to young people in Havana, September 2015).

 

In the assemblies of the first centuries, the baptised were said to be enlightened, people able to orient themselves, choose and become autonomous.

The Lord did not allow his own to boast of their role as guides in the lives of others, which they could easily undermine (v.39).

He therefore did not empower anyone to teach (cf. Greek text of the Gospels, passim) in or outside the community.

Apostles of all times are only to proclaim and remain disciples, i.e. pupils of the Spirit - not to be dictators and experts.

The way of God is Christ himself. It cannot be communicated by teachers: it is not something to be filled with empty heads and useless events, to be filled with plateful externals.

The context of today's passage abolishes judgement, in the ideal of a personal existence transformed into wealth and gift - which ridicules every tendency towards domination.

No one is master of the fate and personality of those who do not direct themselves, otherwise - even with the best of intentions - they all go astray (v.39).

Jesus himself did not command or direct, but educated and helped. The rabbis charged: He offered everything, living with His own (for a reciprocal identification, but with a wide net).

A transparent and creative attitude: this was the true and only rule of conduct for the apostles of all times - often unable to grasp their own great blindness (because they were still one-sided).

Then, of a plant it is not the size and appearance that counts, but the fruit (vv.43-45). All the more reason to re-emphasise that church leaders are not superior to others, nor are they repositories of absolute truths.

In fact, Jesus is incomparable: Master sui generis (v.40).

He does not have a classroom furnished with a desk and pews. And he still teaches along the way: there he introduces us to meet ourselves, our brothers and sisters, and the surrounding reality (in a process, on a journey).

He does not give quiet, compilatory or moralistic lectures: he amazes.

He does not reinterpret the quagmire of knowledge, customs and archaic dispositions - authentic beams (vv.41-42) poked into the free eye of the soul, which distort its gaze.

He proposes his Person and his Life. As well as his reproaches - but precisely those and not others (discounted) volatile as straws (vv.41-42).

 

For the Lord, good character is not a matter of character (submissive, as it has been understood for centuries): it is only in openness to the mission, which gradually expands everyone's life, and prospects.

In this way, Jesus did not give saccharine or pill-box lessons, nor did he propose models to follow; however, some have claimed to do so in his name. The result today is a fine mess.

The Lord's authentic teaching makes room, upsets the cathedrats, overturns normal expectations.

So it is precisely his 'experts' who risk acting as stragglers and blind guides. Unfortunately, they risk ruining the lives of others.

We see in these times how dangerous it is to lose the light of the Gospel.

After a first choice, it is precisely those who consider themselves elected who degrade the ecclesial atmosphere.

The sense of supremacy and haughtiness, as well as the "dollar and bullion" entourage, bring with them every vice.

This is while false teachers consider themselves friends of God and recipients of obvious recognition.

From the way they posture, they still seem to feel clearly superior not only to the people, but to the Master himself (v.40).

In order not to question themselves, they project their own unexpressed imbalances and condemn others - all those who do not want to silence the great questions of meaning - as 'enemies'.

They try by any means, even illicit ones, to impose their own convictions: ideas and ways of living that they first contest and do not even believe. A right that not even Jesus ever claimed.

Let us imagine the slavish "little monsters" (as Pope Francis says) who derive from these vain ones, evidently dreaming of inheriting their popularity, their wellbeing; comforts, servitude, trinkets, gold and palaces.

Even today, the Risen One brands them for what they are: "hypocrites" (v.42). In the Greek language it means thespians, people who act - of fine manners and bad habits.

Comedians deeply offended at having to fit in with others - and even feeling that 'they' are sent to call everyone to the wedding (Mt 22:8-9).

 

The constant demanding of the pretentious, fictional exclusivists has serious spiritual and pastoral implications.

Presumption, arrogance, and a sense of superiority shut out the perception of the inclinations and resources of believers and families - the engine of life's enthusiasm and the principle of incisiveness, exuberance, and pastoral turnover.

Jesus warns his own (who in words gladly call him 'Lord': v.46) against the boastfulness of acting as captains of the troop.

With the danger that while God puts forth gifts, his leaders will crush them one by one.

There is only one Master who guides and knows where to go; and only one person - perhaps inexperienced and thought to be blind, but who sees better than the super-achievers and the big names (super-Apostles with all the tail).

The calculating man calibrated by religion [doctrine-discipline customs] can easily sit still in his seats, with the fine screens behind which he imagines he is protecting himself, feeding himself and making judgments.

But from his recycled bad treasure he will pull out - just around the corner - the 'ugly and corrupt' for others too (vv.43-45; Greek text).

Instead, the man of Faith still feels a new Beauty within, who wants to express himself and remain first-hand - so he will never be an actor of others' parts, nor a director or protagonist of every turn.

Neither is he someone who - without self-respect or the Calling by Name - is content to submit his soul to fashionable or plagiarising agency actors, to whom he can snatch handouts or a 'mediocre draw'.

Worse than the ditches (v.39) into which one falls together.

 

 

Parallel to Mt:

 

Beams and straws: eliminating preconceptions

 

For a transparent coexistence

(Mt 7:1-5)

 

The Sermon on the Mount (Mt 5-7) lists catechesis on salient issues of life in the communities of Galilee and Syria - composed of Jews converted to Christ.

There was no shortage of episodes of contempt (even mutual) turned on especially by veterans accustomed to put newcomers on the threshold of the churches - for their model of life far from the recognised norm, or even for trifles.

But we are not judges, we are family men. And of course, in the final analysis it is precisely malice that sharpens the eye for the slightest faults of others: generally, external straws and shortcomings.This is while the same cunningness glosses over our own enormities - the very heavy plank that separates us not only from God and everyone, but even from ourselves, approaching the selfish and arrogant self.

"Theatrics" (v.5) are those who think big of themselves and always have the mania to look around in order to convince themselves that they can excel - without taking an attitude of regard towards the enigma of life, where instead burdens can turn into progress.

Looking objectively at ourselves and our personal growth - often triggered precisely by deviations from stereotypes or nomenclature - can make us benevolent. It can convince us of respect and even due deference to the more that surrounds us and calls to us.

Indeed, the legalism of plastered details leads to the neglect of the essential, in mutual love (cf. vv.3-5).

We know how hard it is to question ourselves, or to educate the very religious perfectionists to successive detachments from their accidental convictions, which have become as sclerotic as totems out of habit.

In short, by the 1870s, the awareness of the different family and serene relationship with God - and the new way of living his Law - was questioning believers and affecting their relationships with their brothers and sisters in the community.

After introducing both the new criteria of Greater Justice and the recovery of the principles of Creation, the evangelist suggests some essential hints for the internal quality of life of the fraternities.

The cultural background of the senior church members was fiercely legalistic. This background was not conducive to the freedom of mutual evaluations: living together needed to be more transparent.

Devout preconceptions seemed an insuperable boulder for the personalising life and mutual sharing according to the new logic of the Beatitudes [Mt 5:1-12: Self-portrait of Christ as an "open book" (with a spear)].

The cultural baggage linked to fulfilments, sense of duty and hierarchy, addictive lifestyle and old beliefs (which were struggling to be laid to rest) multiplied harsh judgements between generations and between varied cultural approaches.

To encourage communion, Mt wants to present a free and quiet Jesus - not a superman, nor an idol or model: on the contrary, a genuine Person; a Master not one-sided.

Indeed, he knew how to recover and wanted to enhance all individual sensitivities, to allow the expression of friendship and enrichment in every human reality.

Only his strong root in the relationship with the Father was to be a sacred example for each one, and an inviolable paragon for all, always.

This for a rich and global transparency, to be proposed to the disciples as well.

In this way, there was to be no adherence to particular beliefs, nor the repetition of the usual disciplines of perfection.

Nor were pious mass observances to be preferred, sometimes the first impediment to dialogue and the Exodus - in its various opulences.

Then life itself would providentially guide each one towards a specific testimony, which could itself create another opening (relevant to one's own character and vocation of soul).

 

In Palestine, the Lord had not shown Himself obsessive and one-sided, nor reduced to normal, verisimilar patterns - based on cultural codes, evaluative prudences, or moral and religious paradigms.

Trust in the Father and in the life to come gave the Master Jesus the certainty of being able to be totally open to situations and to each person - in whatever reality they found themselves disentangled.

A convivial openness to differences, so as not to block the gaps and the outcome of the Newness in the Spirit of the Beatitudes.

The unconditionality of Love always applies first and foremost to the disciple, the members of the same community, and the neighbour.

This is because we have been called to make our and everyone's existence exponential, not to dull it with preconceived notions and relative convictions.

We were created to love the exceptional truth of woman and man, not to extinguish uniqueness and make judgments about nonentities.

Let us accept Providence, ourselves and the other as we are: aware that there is a precious secret, a destiny of newness and a Mystery that surpasses us... behind every event, in each of our own intimate faces (sustained by the Father), or in the eccentric brother.

 

The ways of following that resonate deep in the heart are as varied as the people, the events, the rhythms commensurate with the soul, the ages.

They embrace the same Proposal - without losing the enduring Mystery or any connection in such multifacetedness.

Only here... Real World, Person, Nature and Eternity are allied.

 

"When the weaver raises one foot, the other lowers. When the movement ceases and one of the feet stops, the weaving stops. His hands throw the bobbin that passes from one to the other; but no hand can hope to hold it. Like the weaver's gestures, it is the union of opposites that weaves our lives' (Peul African Oral Tradition).

"We are absolutely lost if we lack this particular Individuality, the only thing we can truly call our own and whose loss is also a loss for the whole world. It is most precious, precisely because it is not universal' (Tagore).

"We must learn to abandon our defences and our need to control, and trust totally in the guidance of the spirit" (Sobonfu Somé).

"True morality consists not in following the beaten path, but in finding the true path for ourselves and following it without fear" (Gandhi).

 

 

Beams and straws: a paradoxical situation, where sometimes there is an excess of 'belief' - yet Faith is missing.

35 Last modified on Saturday, 31 August 2024 12:36
don Giuseppe Nespeca

Giuseppe Nespeca è architetto e sacerdote. Cultore della Sacra scrittura è autore della raccolta "Due Fuochi due Vie - Religione e Fede, Vangeli e Tao"; coautore del libro "Dialogo e Solstizio".

The family in the modern world, as much as and perhaps more than any other institution, has been beset by the many profound and rapid changes that have affected society and culture. Many families are living this situation in fidelity to those values that constitute the foundation of the institution of the family. Others have become uncertain and bewildered over their role or even doubtful and almost unaware of the ultimate meaning and truth of conjugal and family life. Finally, there are others who are hindered by various situations of injustice in the realization of their fundamental rights [Familiaris Consortio n.1]
La famiglia nei tempi odierni è stata, come e forse più di altre istituzioni, investita dalle ampie, profonde e rapide trasformazioni della società e della cultura. Molte famiglie vivono questa situazione nella fedeltà a quei valori che costituiscono il fondamento dell'istituto familiare. Altre sono divenute incerte e smarrite di fronte ai loro compiti o, addirittura, dubbiose e quasi ignare del significato ultimo e della verità della vita coniugale e familiare. Altre, infine, sono impedite da svariate situazioni di ingiustizia nella realizzazione dei loro fondamentali diritti [Familiaris Consortio n.1]
"His" in a very literal sense: the One whom only the Son knows as Father, and by whom alone He is mutually known. We are now on the same ground, from which the prologue of the Gospel of John will later arise (Pope John Paul II)
“Suo” in senso quanto mai letterale: Colui che solo il Figlio conosce come Padre, e dal quale soltanto è reciprocamente conosciuto. Ci troviamo ormai sullo stesso terreno, dal quale più tardi sorgerà il prologo del Vangelo di Giovanni (Papa Giovanni Paolo II)
We come to bless him because of what he revealed, eight centuries ago, to a "Little", to the Poor Man of Assisi; - things in heaven and on earth, that philosophers "had not even dreamed"; - things hidden to those who are "wise" only humanly, and only humanly "intelligent"; - these "things" the Father, the Lord of heaven and earth, revealed to Francis and through Francis (Pope John Paul II)
Veniamo per benedirlo a motivo di ciò che egli ha rivelato, otto secoli fa, a un “Piccolo”, al Poverello d’Assisi; – le cose in cielo e sulla terra, che i filosofi “non avevano nemmeno sognato”; – le cose nascoste a coloro che sono “sapienti” soltanto umanamente, e soltanto umanamente “intelligenti”; – queste “cose” il Padre, il Signore del cielo e della terra, ha rivelato a Francesco e mediante Francesco (Papa Giovanni Paolo II)
But what moves me even more strongly to proclaim the urgency of missionary evangelization is the fact that it is the primary service which the Church can render to every individual and to all humanity [Redemptoris Missio n.2]
Ma ciò che ancor più mi spinge a proclamare l'urgenza dell'evangelizzazione missionaria è che essa costituisce il primo servizio che la chiesa può rendere a ciascun uomo e all'intera umanità [Redemptoris Missio n.2]
That 'always seeing the face of the Father' is the highest manifestation of the worship of God. It can be said to constitute that 'heavenly liturgy', performed on behalf of the whole universe [John Paul II]
Quel “vedere sempre la faccia del Padre” è la manifestazione più alta dell’adorazione di Dio. Si può dire che essa costituisce quella “liturgia celeste”, compiuta a nome di tutto l’universo [Giovanni Paolo II]

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