Different solicitations: the humanising action, and the dry action of the misanthropes
(Mk 3:1-6)
Commenting on the Tao Tê Ching (XLVII), Master Ho-shang Kung writes: "The saint knows the great by basing himself on the small, the external by examining the internal".
And he reiterates: 'Without ascending into the heavens or descending into the abyss, the saint knows Heaven and Earth: he knows them with his heart.
Procuring the good and lifting up the real person - as he is, in his uniqueness - is the only non-negotiable value; the criterion of the entire Gospel.
Even the Torah in its core and meaning was meant to be an important means of human, personal, religious pedagogy - not the end.
Norms willingly accompany us, when they facilitate the way to dialogue with the Lord, encountering Him in us and in our brothers and sisters.
But the 'letter' is cold and unmotivated.
Once the encounter has taken place, precedence must be given to God's Project, which is solicitous to fulfil us and allow us to flourish; not to procedures.
In fact, prescriptions put everyone and always on the alert for 'different needs'.
Hence, solidarity and fraternity are placed above any devout and identity-based obsequies, or doctrinal necessities, as well as outward observance of worship [if lived by automatons].
The norms themselves must be understood to lead to life 'with' and 'in' Christ - to fulfilment and fullness of being.
Otherwise the scrupulous virtue of religion turns into malign action and vice of faith - which loses the totality of the person (v.4).
In this way, on the day of the synagogue, one does not celebrate a card-stamping restoration.
Rather, one gathers in assembly to better restore man to his dignity as a sublime being, to be promoted in an unlimited way.
The Sabbath of the Messiah is not the day of customary partialities: gestures and words express the Face of the Father, his solicitude.
It is a time of both Liberation and Creation, of promoting vital energies, according to the original and full Plan.
But in the place of habitual ritual, where the traditional [i.e. à la page] compassionate mentality prevails, Jesus does not go to pray, but to teach and heal.
Not even the paralysed man had asked for healing - so much so that it seemed normal for him to stand there like that and receive no attention, no encouragement; not even good.
Nevertheless, Love is the core and essence of the Law: even on the day of precept, help was allowed by the same prescriptions, in case of extreme need or repercussion on others.
The Lord is saying to [his intimate] church leaders:
To unblock the person who can do no good - "a barren hand" (vv.1.3) - is a matter of life and death, even for the whole community [heal or "annihilate": v.4].
When the wigwams of indifferent, dry religion, and the first-raters of sophisticated, distorted devotion, are provoked, the pious mask disappears.
They become violent even in the face of the good that God works on those who are misguided - and devoted to the worst without even realising it.
The hand [action] to be healed remains first and foremost that of the one-sided mummies to whom the strong teaching of the episode is addressed.
Observing the day of the Lord means, for us too: enhancing man's expressive possibilities and reintegrating him into a 'new order'.
This by clearing the environment prone to sectarianism [or ideologism] of old and new owls who intend to save appearances in order to maintain power, fake doctrinal prestige, subservience of consciences.
But in order to fulfil the redemptive 'precept', deviant attitudes must first also be assumed, and saved - like preparatory energies for new arrangements.
Master Ho-shang again: 'When those at the top love the Way, those at the bottom love virtue; when those at the top love war, those at the bottom love strength'.
The plagiarism agencies of some particular 'churches' that want souls locked into relationships of domination would gladly plan to keep the sick in their dependent state.
For some perverse mechanisms of pastoral care and mass catechesis, the fearful and insecure must remain anonymous; even in the time of the synodal journey.
The voiceless are always useful, so that the well-introduced can continue to float about the world - with their unchanged foibles or theories.
For pious, moralistic, or partisan interests [this one private and glamorous, i.e. full of legalistic pitfalls] would gladly leave them uncertain and unaware, or worse - even if Jesus himself showed up to set them free.
We can no longer afford this.
We can no longer condone neglect: the current jolt of the global crisis is accelerating the fall of masks, of swampy or histrionic attitudes; and of symbolic practices for their own sake.
The emergence that invests everyone makes one better understand the difference between unconscious content and truth, sedentary fossilisation and hidden energies; religiosity and Faith - the discriminator of life in Christ and in the Spirit.
In its sides of limitation and Wholeness, legalism and Liberation, stasis and Rebirth, return to as always or Regeneration, formalism and Gladness, discernment becomes more acute today.
Having already judged it useless to take advantage of the official religious institution to introduce into it the novelty of the Kingdom, in Chapter 3 of the Gospel of Mark a new community project is advocated.
The Master wants to guide people from all walks of life to feel and live deeply their own and others' human dimension, marked by the paradoxically fruitful experience of fallibility.
Only when they internalise its meaning and live in this way will authorities and believers truly experience compassion for the limitations of the flesh - a characteristic understanding of being 'human'.
In this work, the Lord always starts with the masses abandoned by their shepherds.
Genuine incipit comes from the insignificant people who are disengaged from the authorities of the religious-political fabric, and from the official lines of dynastic succession.
To internalise and live the message:
When have you noticed virtues of religion converted into vices of faith?
What do you mean by Salvation secured by the Kingdom of God?
Theology and symbolism of the Hand:
"Let us therefore reflect again on the signs in which the Sacrament has been given to us. At the centre is the very ancient gesture of the laying on of hands, with which He took possession of me, saying: 'You belong to me'. But with this He also said: 'You are under the protection of my hands. You are under the protection of my heart. You are kept in the hollow of my hands and just so you stand in the vastness of my love. Stay in the space of my hands and give me yours'.
Let us remember then that our hands have been anointed with oil, which is the sign of the Holy Spirit and his power. Why the hands? Man's hand is the instrument of his action, it is the symbol of his ability to face the world, in fact to "take it in hand". The Lord has laid his hands on us and now wants our hands to become his hands in the world. He wants them no longer to be instruments to take things, men, the world for us, to reduce it to our possession, but instead to transmit his divine touch, placing themselves at the service of his love. He wants them to be instruments of service and thus an expression of the mission of the whole person who stands as a guarantor of Him and brings Him to men. If man's hands symbolically represent his faculties and, generally, technique as the power to dispose of the world, then the anointed hands must be a sign of his capacity to give, of his creativity in shaping the world with love - and for this, of course, we need the Holy Spirit. In the Old Testament, anointing is a sign of the assumption of service: the king, the prophet, the priest does and gives more than he gives himself. In a way, he is dispossessed of himself in service, in which he makes himself available to one greater than himself. If Jesus presents himself today in the Gospel as the Anointed One of God, the Christ, then this means precisely that he acts on the Father's mission and in unity with the Holy Spirit and that, in this way, he gives the world a new kingship, a new priesthood, a new way of being a prophet, who does not seek himself, but lives for him in whose sight the world was created. Let us place our hands today once again at his disposal and pray to him to take us by the hand again and to guide us".
[Pope Benedict, Chrism homily 13 April 2006].