1Timothy 2:1-7; Luke
4:16-22
Think for a moment about how we mark
the passage of time in our lives. We all
know how old we are. Students know what grade
they are in. Workers know how long they
have been employed. Married people count
their anniversaries. Some of us remember
America’s bicentennial. Perhaps we pay
attention to such markers to try to make sense of the meaning of our lives as
those caught up in the inevitable cycle of birth and death, of one generation
passing away as another arises. As we
read in Ecclesiastes, “That which has been is what will be, That
which is done is what will be done, and there is nothing
new under the sun.” (Eccles. 1:9)
Today we celebrate the ecclesiastical
New Year with a gospel reading that is anything but business as usual in a
world enslaved to the fear of death. In Jesus
Christ’s first sermon in His hometown of Nazareth, He identified Himself
publicly as the Messiah by saying that He fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah as
One anointed “to preach good news to the poor and to heal the broken hearted…to
proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at
liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the
Lord.” Everyone present liked what He
had to say, for what could be better than to have a neighbor as the next King
David, a righteous political and military ruler who would liberate Israel from Roman
control and usher in a time of national blessedness?
The verses following
today’s reading show, however, that the Lord is a radically different kind of
Messiah from what the people had expected.
For He went on to remind them that God had blessed Gentiles through the great
prophets Elijah and Elisha, while there were Jews who continued to suffer. In
doing so, Christ challenged their assumption that God’s blessings were only for
people like them to the exclusion of the hated Gentiles. They were so outraged that they tried to
throw Him off a cliff. Think about that
for a moment. The Lord’s neighbors went
from being very happy about His words to trying to kill Him because He made
clear that God’s blessings were not only for people of their religious and
ethnic heritage, but for the entire world.
Their rejection of the true Messiah revealed how they were enslaved to hatred
of those they saw as foreigners and enemies.
They had corrupted their faith to the point that they were so consumed
with lust for power and vengeance that they tried to kill the Savior.
It is certainly
understandable that people living under the occupation of a foreign power would
want to be liberated. That was all the
more true for the Jews in light of God’s promises to Abraham to bless his
descendants in their own land. Prophets
had foretold their return from exile in Babylon and envisioned them flourishing
in a way that would draw all nations and peoples to God. Unfortunately, many misinterpreted these
great promises to the point that they identified God’s Kingdom with an earthly
realm for only their own community. That
is why those who heard the Lord’s sermon in Nazareth tried to kill Him when He
reminded them that God’s concern extends even to the hated Gentiles. It was also why the same crowds who cheered
His entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday called for His crucifixion a few days
later, once it became clear that He was not a conventional worldly ruler about
to deliver them from Roman occupation.
Many still
struggle today to accept that Christ’s Kingdom is not merely an extension of
life as we know it in this world with a few changes that favor certain groups or
agendas over against others. We so
easily forget that, when our Lord conquered Hades and the grave in His glorious
resurrection on the third day, He ushered in the eighth day of the everlasting
joy of the heavenly reign. Those who
share in His blessed life are no longer enslaved to the fear of death that drives
people to take up sides against one another in a futile effort to preserve their
individual existence this side of the grave.
Our risen Lord has destroyed the
basis of such enmity and division. He
calls us to a radically new way of life not characterized by the old familiar
obsession with self-preservation, but in which we conform our character to His to
the point that we acquire the spiritual health to “preach good news to the poor
and…heal the broken hearted…[and] proclaim release to the captives and
recovering of sight to the blind… set at liberty those who are oppressed…[and] proclaim
the acceptable year of the Lord” in thought, word, and deed.
Those who know
from the depths of their hearts that even the grave is now an entryway to eternal life will have the freedom to serve and pray for all who suffer from
the debilitating effects of sin as beloved neighbors, regardless of whether they
are friends or foes according to the standards of the conventional wisdom. The
same Lord Who had mercy on Samaritans, Roman centurions, demon-possessed
Gentiles, and Jews who had become notorious sinners has made us members of His
own Body, the Church, in which the typical human distinctions are simply
irrelevant. In His Kingdom, there are no
grounds to view anyone as essentially a stranger, a foreigner, or an alien instead
of as a fellow child of God.
Saint Paul, the
former Pharisee, became the unlikely apostle to the Gentiles, for he knew that
the Lord wants “all to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the
truth.” For Christ is the “one Mediator…Who
gave Himself a ransom for all.” All who bear God’s image and likeness had
become subject to death through sin, and all needed a liberation they could not
give themselves. As he wrote to the Church in Rome, “There is no difference between Jew and
Gentile, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and
all are justified freely by His grace through the
redemption that came by Christ Jesus.” (Rom. 3:22-24) Because the
Lord has healed the great division of Jew and Gentile, it is clear that earthly
distinctions between groups of people have no significance at all in His
Kingdom. Through faith in Him, all may become
heirs to the fulfillment of the promises to Abraham.
We often fail to embrace the full meaning
of this radical claim for how we view ourselves and our world. The nations, leaders, and governments come
and go, as do economic systems, political movements, social groups, and
cultures. While such passing affiliations shape important dimensions of our
lives in this world, we must never allow them to cloud our spiritual vision to
the point that we define ourselves or others fundamentally in light of them. If
we do, we will fall into the idolatry of seeking first a kingdom of worldly
corruption that remains enslaved to the fear of death. If we do, we will distract ourselves from
facing the truth of our own brokenness by building ourselves up over against
others from whom we differ in some superficial way. It is so easy and appealing to invent excuses
to justify indulging our passions for hatred, vengeance, and domination against
real or imagined enemies. Of course,
that is completely contrary to the way of Christ, Who said, “You
have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute
you, that you may be children of your Father
in heaven.” (Matt. 5:43-45)
St. Paul suffered
imprisonment and death at the hands of the Roman Empire; nonetheless, he instructed
St. Timothy to pray for all people, including “for kings and all who are in
high positions, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life, godly and
respectful in every way.” His concern
was not for some form of earthly power or glory for himself or for the Church. Instead, He focused on entering into the new
day of a Kingdom not of this world, which is why he could pray even for those
who would ultimately take his life. This
was a radically different attitude from that shown by those who tried to kill
the Savior after His sermon in Nazareth because He refused to bless their fear
and hatred of those they saw as foreigners and enemies.
As we begin a
new year in the Church, let us refuse to see ourselves in light of the divisions
between people that are driven by the fear of death and serve only to fuel our passions. Instead, let us live in the eighth day of the
joy of the resurrection, which alone makes it possible for us to participate so
fully in the life of the Savior that we also “preach good news to the poor and…heal
the broken hearted…[and] proclaim release to the captives and recovering of
sight to the blind… set at liberty those who are oppressed…[and] proclaim the
acceptable year of the Lord.” Let us stop living according to the familiar standards
of corruption as we bear witness in our own lives that Christ has truly brought
a radically new Kingdom that is not of this world. May this year be for all of us a time of entering
more fully into the eternal blessedness that He came to share with all for whom
He gave Himself as a ransom.
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