By Fr Antony Christy, SDB –
September 26, 20215 – 26th Sunday in Ordinary time
Numbers 11: 25-29; James 5: 1-6; Mark 9: 38-43,45,47-48
We are living, not just in the time of plurality, but in a time of post-truth plurality! Are you wondering what this term ‘post truth plurality’ is all about? We shall first reflect on it, clarify it first and then enter into the Word of God for this Sunday, because the Word has a challenging call to give us! We know what plurality is – specially if one is from a context like India – we experience plurality on a daily basis. Plurality of religions, languages, proveniences, socio-political ideologies and so on, are our normal life situation and it is a universal condition. But what is this post-truth plurality?
Avoiding a whole lot of philosophical excursus on what ‘post-truth’ means, we can simply understand it in these terms: it can be a precarious stand that persons (or societies at large) take when it comes to truth, accepting what vibes with their convictions as truth and insisting that they should have the freedom to hold it so, but at the same time not allowing the other/s to have their opinion or their judgement on things. It is a kind of relativism that is self-centred or autoreferential. Now taking off from that description, post-truth plurality is – affirming and appreciating a plurality that is convenient to oneself and failing to see the goodness or the possible positivity in another similar experience of plurality! Don’t we have realities today which boasts of ‘unity in diversity’, but looks at difference as a problem, diversity as a threat, plurality as a dangerous multiplicity and not a richness! Why all these discussions – simply to hightlight the fact that we, the so-called people of God, that is ‘Reign people,’ cannot have such a mentality of pseudo-openness of convenience or hypocritical and empty dicourses of being one people of God but in fact, feeling divided and egoistic. The readings bring out this message with such power, in three exhortations today.
Intracommunitarian Solidarity: The first exhortation from the Word, to be Reign people is, to practice Intracommunitarian Solidarity, that is, solidarity with those who are with me, my fellow believers in the Lord. In the first reading, when the enthusiasts with Moses get upset with those two of their fellowmen – Eldad and Medad – because they were getting popular by themselves, Moses grabs the opportunity to give them the lesson: we need to live in solidarity in the Lord. It is not about who does what, but about for whom we do what we do! Within a believing community, it has to be for the Lord, only then we are truly Reign people. How many times within our parish communities, religious communities or even within the family, there arise problems because some one is doing good! Our ego and our sense of jealousy makes us uncharitable to our own brothers and sisters, making every one’s life sad and miserable! How can we be called Reign people?
Intercommunitarian Solidarity: The second exhortation towards being Reign people is, to promote intercommunitarian solidarity. This has to be lived in varied levels – taking a family as the fundamental unit of a people of God, it takes the form of a sense of solidarity among families; solidarity among one believing community and others (as St. Paul used to insist with the early Christian communities); interdiocesan communities or among religious congregations… at whatever level, without love and unity, we fail terribly in our vocation. The worst scandal we can give the world is our disunity. Just imagine the interdenominational or interconfessional problems we create and nurture, without understanding all these differences will turn obsolete in the presence of the Lord, in the Reign of the Lord. Jesus teaches this in the Gospel – you should not stop them from performing miracles, anyway they did it in my name, isn’t it, he asks the disciples who looked so apprehensive about someone else taking away their coveted place. Jesus’ point is , to be Reign people, we need to transcend all these demarcations and convince ourselves, that we all belong to that One, Powerful, loving God!
Extracommunitarian Solidarity: The third exhortation towards being Reign people, is to be, as Pope Francis repeats so often, ‘being a Church that reaches out!’ We cannot be closed in within ourselves, if we need to be truly people of God, authentically persons of the Reign. Looking out and reaching out, in particular to the poor, the exploited, the oppressed, the down trodden and families in crises. James begins with a conceptual painting of partiality in a community, dual standards in treating people and so on…and ends with this teaching on woe to those who are insensitive to the other. This is in fact one of the essential criteria for a Reign person – to have the capacity to see the sufferings of the other. Jesus taught it in clear and lucid terms, and the apostles learnt from it. To reach out to the needy, to help and empower the poor, a kind word to the worried, a simple smile to one who is sad and lonely, these are some simple gestures endorsed by the Spirit of the Lord who works through anyone, absolutely any one. We cannot let the black clouds of hierarchical thinking, chosen-people syndrome, and fear of the Truth, obscure the light we have within us as children of God.
To be Reign people, in short, is to grow in communion with the Lord, with the rest of our brothers and sisters, and with the entire universe. That communion is really the Reign of God that we are called to proclaim and make present. doing that we shall grow to be Reign people.
Fr Antony Christy is a Salesian Priest from 2005, who has a Masters in Philosophy (specialisation in Religion) and a Masters in Theology (Specialisation in Catechetics). He is currently pursuing his doctoral research in Theology at Salesian Pontifical University, Rome. Walking with the Young towards a World of Peace and Dialogue is the passion that fires him.