January 16, 2021

Stayed With Him

Second Sunday of Ordinary Time

Jesus said to them, “Come, and you will see.”  So they went and saw where Jesus was staying, and they stayed with him that day.” (John 1:39)

Reflection

Sometimes when I meet with people in spiritual conversation, their comments sound like this: “I really want to pray and take time for meditation each day, but I am just so busy.”   It’s true.  When things are hectic and we get hooked on watching cable or rom-coms, then the first thing to go by the wayside is our commitment to prayer.

But witness what happens in this Sunday’s Gospel passage from Mark.  Two disciples are just a bit curious about this Jesus.  They had been traveling with the Baptist, but now a new man.  That whole day they stayed long enough for Jesus to make a real impression on them.  Andrew was so impressed he thought to bring his brother to Jesus and see what good might come from their meeting.

Someone brought you to Jesus too, and you have stayed with him long enough for the Holy Spoirit to settle in your heart.  Try again.

Stay with Jesus this day.  Fight off any distractions, then turn your attention back to Christ.  Stay with Him, and he will certainly change you as he did Andrew and his brother.

 


 

 

January 07, 2021

In the Jordan

The Baptism of the Lord

Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized in the Jordan by John. (Mark 1:9)

Reflection

These two adults actually stepped into a river, and one dunked the other under the water so that He would emerge, as any human would, gasping for air and life.  This ritual is a basic human event that is packed with meaning.

1) If Jesus did not sin, then why was he baptized?  Because he wanted to make a public, adult statement about his commitment to us as human beings.  Our response: “He’s one of us.”

Sometimes the hardest thing for Christians to believe is not that Jesus is the Son of God, but that Jesus was fully human.  Maybe you grew up thinking Jesus had super intelligence even when he was an infant and always knew he was the Son of God.  You might have thought he was never really tempted into sin, had no sexual feelings, and knew he was going to rise from the tomb, so he wasn’t really afraid of being crucified. No:  he’s one of us. That is why he chose to be baptized in public.

2) So, what meaning does his Baptism have for us in today’s world?

Christians are to follow and continue after him in the work he did.  For many of us educated in the faith before the 1970’s, the sacrament of Baptism suggests infants, original sin, and a private ceremony held somewhere in a side chapel at church. But today’s gospel scene helps us to identify with the sacrament as adults:
    - This story is not about an infant, but an adult
    - This story is not about someone with original sin, but the sinless, active, Jesus
    - This story isn’t private, it’s out in the open and recorded for all time

Let us accept our identity as active and powerful citizens of God’s kingdom, called to go public with the work of our favorite star. How?  By …
Forgiving the faults and limitations of the people we know.
-         
Faithfully giving your best to your job or your families
-          Putting into action those small gestures of charity that pop into our heads each day.
-         
Encouraging others in self-improvement.
-         
Making choices and actions whereby we become more human, more dignified.

Today is the first Sunday of Ordinary Time, for the rest of this year 2021, we will be watching Jesus on this mission, through the eyes of the Gospel of Mark.  It’s a very short Gospel, and you may want to read it a few times this year on your own.  May we recall our identification with him on this mission, and put his example into action each day of the coming year.