24TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY
TIME – B
Mark 8:27-35
How
much do we know Christ? Up to what
extent is our following of him?
In the
midst of the highly paganized territory of Caesarea Philippi, Jesus asked the disciples who they thought he was. During the course of the public ministry
of Jesus, the people must have had different perceptions of him. But more
importantly he was interested in the perception of who his disciples thought he
was. Peter who was the spokesperson of the apostles proclaimed “You are the
Christ.”
Israel
since time immemorial had been longing for the coming of their messiah.
But they were not just waiting for a messiah but for a strong political messiah
who would bring an end to their poverty and freedom from their slavery from
Roman rule. Although Peter professed that Jesus was the Christ
nonetheless his understanding was the same as the rest of the Jews.
Because of that Jesus called him “Satan”.
Before Jesus embarked on his public ministry, he had his “40-day retreat” in
the desert. The devil, who was aware of the mission of Jesus to
inaugurate the Kingdom of God through the cross, tried to stop him through the
three temptations which were a shortcut to glory without any suffering and pain.
Jesus rebuked the devil: “Get away, Satan.” Anyone who tempts us away
from God is a satan.
Like the
Jews who needed a messiah, we also need our own messiah. Like Peter, we also want to profess that Jesus is
the Christ but if our perception of the messiah is like that of Peter’s, then
eventually we will also be scandalized. In the first place, who among us
would want pain and suffering? In the secularized world, who would ever
want self-renunciation, sacrifice, fasting, abstinence, much less the
cross? They seem not to appeal to the senses or to right reason.
And what do we want? the political messiah of the Jews, a super-God who
will free us from pain, heal our sickness, put an end to our poverty and solve
all our problems. We want to follow Christ but not with the cross. This
is how the devil has been tempting us all the time; this is the maxim of the
secularized world: “take up the shortcut to glory and fame without
sacrifice. The cross is an abomination!”
Because we are following a crucified Christ, our life will not be free of
suffering. But we do not just embrace suffering as such because suffering
without the salvific action of Christ is empty. Our following of Christ
demands that we are able to translate our profession of faith in him into
concrete works just like the reminder of St. James in the second reading
today: Faith without works is dead. If we only pray for the poor or
victims of calamities but without giving something to them, our prayer is
empty. If we are faithful in going to Sunday mass but without
contributing for the upliftment of the poor and the needy, our worship is
incomplete.
In this highly secularized world, the same is being asked of us: Who is Jesus
for you? Are you willing to follow him to the cross?
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