First reading: Wisdom 2:12,17-20
—¨Psalm: Ps 54:3-6,8—¨
Epistle: James 3:16-18; James 4:1-3
Gospel: Mark 9:30-37
You ask but do not receive,
because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions.
The test:
Let’s start with today’s reading from Wisdom. We all know that the references in Wisdom are to the Jewish leaders persecution of the Messiah, that is factual, but where is the deeper meaning.
Peeling away the obvious we see meaning in the dichotomy between the desires of the leaders and the message of the Messiah. The leaders see the Messiah as: the One who is obnoxious to us; sets himself against our doings, reproaches us for transgressions of the law and charges us with violations.
The Jewish leaders had century upon century of legal interpretations to stand on. They had everything figured out from the how and when of washing ones hands to who and what the Messiah would be. Jesus didn’t fit that bill and they were perturbed, in fact angry because they knew better than God.
The Jewish leaders failed the test of true discipleship. They couldn’t set aside personal interpretations, personal opinions and follow the interpretation, the way shown them by God. How like the leaders of our day and age — religious and secular leaders.
Dependence:
St. James gives us a lesson in dependence, the lesson lost on the Jewish leaders and on our leaders today. What they miss is that discipleship starts in dependence, it starts in admitting our not knowing and in questioning every one of our motives. It may seem a little too analytical or self critical, and I don’t mean that we should downplay ourselves as ignorant, but we should question and compare. When we do, we place our reliance on God’s way over our way. We declare ourselves fully dependent on God’s wisdom, God’s way. God’s wisdom becomes the yardstick by which we measure.
St. James’ key point is that:
the wisdom from above is first of all pure,
then peaceable, gentle, compliant,
full of mercy and good fruits,
without inconstancy or insincerity.
Fact checking:
As disciples we must compare and contrast what we do, what we think, what we believe is inspired against the wisdom from above. That wisdom is scripture and capital —T— Tradition. That is the truth inspired by the Holy Spirit and handed down to us.
Look what we will find in that truth: purity, peace, gentleness, compliance, mercy, good fruit from our work, consistency and sincerity. Look at the conflicts facing so many Churches and nations — and they can all be boiled down to a failure to fact check against Scripture and Tradition, a failure to rely on the wisdom from above, a failure to be childlike disciples.
We are subject to sin:
St. James also reminds us of the consequences of a failure to be dependent, a failure to fact check our actions and opinions against the wisdom from above. As the Jewish leaders and much of the Jewish nation missed the Messiah, as they failed in the test of discipleship so too are we subject to failure. It is expressed in all those things St. James mentions: wars, conflicts caused by our passions, covetousness, murder, envy, fighting and war, emptiness because we do not ask and when we do ask we seek after our own ends.
We are subject to fall into sin when we forget the source of wisdom and our call to be disciples of that wisdom. We fall in sin when we place ourselves ahead of and on top of God’s way in everything from our daily lives to the structure and teaching of the Holy Church.
Sin is manifested in being on-top:
Our sin is most manifest when we claim to speak for God, for the action of His Holy Spirit. It is manifested when we place ourselves on-top in relation to God thinking we have some unique and never heard of insight. Like the Apostles in the Gospel whose chief question was who shall be first among us. Each wanted to believe he was on top.
Have you ever heard someone mention a fresh inspiration from the Holy Spirit for our times? I’ve heard it called a fresh breath of the Spirit, an opening of windows, as if the Holy Spirit somehow needs a BreathSaver or a Renuzit to respond to our times.
Are our struggles that different, our times so vastly set apart from the history of the human condition? Of course not! Our sins are as old as Adam and our propensity to put ourselves above God, first-in-line, is no different than that day in the garden when Adam and Eve thought they could be like God; the day the Apostles argued about who was first.
We are dependent on the wisdom from above:
The wisdom from above is the purity of God’s truth. It isn’t something we need be haughty about, but something we must rely on, something we are dependent upon, that we check ourselves against. It is truth as old as history because it is the truth of God. When we become His disciples, His messengers, we set ourselves apart from the world’s way. We break from the habit of self-reliance, being on top, to God reliance. We stop delivering our message and deliver His message.
This is a matter of choice and of humility. It is not a matter of perfection, for, as I said, we will fall in sin, but when we do, when we fail in our discipleship, to whom shall we turn for redemption? If we are true disciples we turn to the wisdom from above.
True discipleship:
The Apostles were arguing along the way. First, the Gospel teaches us that they just didn’t get what Jesus was saying.
But they did not understand the saying,
and they were afraid to question him.
First they feared the wisdom from above, next:
They had been discussing among themselves on the way
who was the greatest. —¨
Good job Apostles. Don’t rely on what God already said was important, on the wisdom from above, rather figure our who’s first, who’s on top, who has the insight of God. The Apostles were the first example of Church-gone-wrong for us, the making of church that is not of the Church but of us, of our whims, our desires, of our thinking we know better than God. They were so busy figuring out who’s on first they forgot Who is first.
Now don’t mistake the democratic nature of the PNCC for this type of demagoguery. Our democratic nature lies in the Church membership’s having a say over the secular matters of the Church, control of the assets and property of the Church in which the membership has rightly invested in and supported. This demagoguery goes to the issue of who is in charge of our beliefs, our theology, our Catholicity. It places man in the role of speaking for God. Watch out for those wolves in sheep’s clothing declaring they have all knowledge of the Spirit and righteousness. If it isn’t in scripture and Tradition beware.
[Jesus] said to them,—¨—If anyone wishes to be first,—¨he shall be the last of all and the servant of all.— —¨Taking a child, he placed it in the their midst,—¨ and putting his arms around it, he said to them,—¨ —Whoever receives one child such as this in my name, receives me;—¨ and whoever receives me,—¨ receives not me but the One who sent me.—
The child is the simplicity of the wisdom from on high. It is what we were given, our faith, our Catholicity, all we have and hold dear in our Holy Polish National Catholic Church. Disciples do not invent, but give. Disciples do not control, but love. Disciples rely on Scripture and Tradition, holding fast to the wisdom from on high and teaching what has been given.
The desires of this age are like the desires of the Jewish leaders, who relied on themselves and what they thought right and just. Those desires test and persecute Christ, they nail Him to the cross over and over. The desire of the disciple on the other hand is childlike humility, acceptance of God’s wisdom which surpasses that of man and yet loves him completely. The disciple asks rightly, believes rightly, acts rightly — holding the orthodox faith which gives purity, peace, gentleness, compliance, mercy, good fruit from our work, consistency and sincerity. Rely on that, fact check that, and stand in the Catholic faith taught and delivered to us. Doing so we will pass the test of true discipleship and inherit the kingdom of heaven. Amen.