Nineteenth Sunday
in Ordinary Time Year A
Every first day of Chinese New Year would mean paying
a visit to the home of the matriarch of the paternal side of my family, my
great grand aunt. I used to be fascinated by the images of the Buddhist and
Taoist deities placed on top of and below the family altar. I guess its
placement indicated the importance of the deity in the hierarchy of that
pantheon. One particular year, I noticed a distinctive change in the altar
arrangement. It was the placement of a strange looking ‘deity’ among the other
more familiar personages. Surprisingly, it was a photograph, not a painting, of
a chubby cheerful-looking Indian man with a large afro hair-style, placed at
the very center of the altar top. It triggered my innate curiosity. My mother,
being ever so intuitive, frowned and forewarned me not to ask any silly and
embarrassing questions. My father, clueless as ever, blurted out, “Who is that
man in the picture?” My great grand aunt quipped, “Oh, He’s Sai Baba. He’s a
powerful miracle worker, a God worshipped by many of his devoted followers.” I
must confess, he looked more like a cuddly teddy bear.
The following year, I noticed that the photo-portrait
of this god-guru had been relegated to an ignoble spot beneath the altar and in
the year thereafter, the photograph disappeared altogether and was never seen
again. I guess this god-guru had proven to be a serious let-down to have been
booted from great grand-aunt’s list of deities to be honoured and worshiped.
This whole little episode got me thinking. How easy it is for people to look
for a god that fits the bill, who meets their expectations for prayers
answered, disasters evaded or financial crisis resolved. But the soonest they
discover that this deity no longer serves their purpose, they are ever ready to
change alliances; some even changing gods as frequently as they change their
underwear.
This little story is not intended to belittle
non-Christian beliefs or dismiss them all as superstition. The purpose in
telling this story is to highlight the point that it is often so convenient to
make God fit our bill of expectations, to make Him in our own image and
likeness. So many, “Christians” included, have created a god in their own image
and likeness, a God that sounds like them, think like them, and even feels like
them. This is a convenient God to worship, especially when he agrees with your
lifestyle, when he tolerates and exonerates what the Church condemns as sin.
Unfortunately, there is almost no end to this ridiculous god-making because
there is always some new crime or sin that needs to be justified. This is a God
who makes no demands of you and doesn’t expect you to change. Rather it is
those who hold on to their antiquated scriptures and magisterial teachings who
must change. How convenient?
However, the truth
is that our God does make demands of us. In the call of Our Lord Jesus Christ
announcing the coming of the Kingdom of God, the clarion call to change is
made, “Repent and Believe in the good news!” Being able to change is simply
part of being a Christian! True, but it is too bad the vast majority of
“Christians” don’t see it that way.
The truth is, it’s
tempting to co-opt the Lord and His message. The re-envisioning of Jesus is most
obvious when it violates actual historical fact, but there are countless
subtler versions of the same distortion. There is the Jesus who welcomes
sinners and celebrates their lifestyles without asking for change. There is the
warm and fuzzy Jesus who only teaches love and mercy, a mercy that doesn’t
require repentance. There is the self-help Jesus who came to motivate you to be
the Best-You. There is also the Jesus who understands that your personal
happiness is paramount, and others are secondary, when you choose to get a
divorce or an abortion. And then, there is the radical social-justice
orientated Jesus with a political economic revolution to lead. Not
surprisingly, most of these Jesuses look much like the Christians promoting
them.
It is good to take
heed of the wise advice of St. Augustine, who said that “if you comprehend, it
is not God. If you are able to comprehend, it is because you mistook something
else for God. If you almost comprehend, it is again because you allowed your
own thoughts to deceive you” (Sermon 52, 16; see also Sermon 117, 5). Our
supposed knowledge and perception of God, which is freed from Divine
Revelation, is often prone to self-deception.
In today’s first
reading, we accompany Elijah, as he encounters the God of Surprises. Elijah had
just won a great victory for the Lord on Mount Carmel but it proved to be a
Pyrrhic one. No sooner had he defended the reputation and dignity of the God of
Israel over the false pagan god of the evil queen Jezebel, the latter
threatened to have him arrested and killed. He fled into the desert where
through the ministration of an angel, he was led to this mountain, the scene
that we had just heard in the First Reading.
He had confronted the false gods of the pagans on the other mountain.
But now, he must confront his own demons, his own false images of God on this
mountain. He has to silence all his internal voices and put aside all his
presumptions that tell him what God is like so that he can receive God as God
is. Once Elijah has met God on God’s terms, and not on his own terms, he is
open to hear the truth, which sets him free from illusion. God sends him on his
last mission to appoint a successor, the prophet Elisha.
In the gospel, we
have another incident of mistaken identity that needed to be corrected. The miracle of Our
Lord Jesus Christ walking on the water, recorded in three of the Gospels, came
on the heels of His miraculous feeding of the multitude. It was the miracle of
Jesus walking on the water that, more than any other, convinced Jesus’
disciples that He was indeed the Son of God. But this recognition did not come
immediately. In fact, when the disciples initially saw the Lord walking on the
lake, they thought He was a ghost levitating above the surface of the sea. Had they been waiting in faith, they would
not have jumped to this conclusion. This may be the first but would not be the
last occasion for mistaken identity.
After His resurrection, the Risen Lord was again mistaken for a ghost
until He chose to allow His disciples to touch Him and to eat with Him.
Ultimately, this challenged them to deeper faith, not just to take the leap of
faith and walk across the waters like St Peter, but to accept the deeper truth
of the Incarnation, that He indeed was the Son of God.
That is what makes
the Incarnation both redemptive yet dangerous. On the one hand, God came near.
He took on the frailty of human nature, making possible an unprecedented
intimacy between Him and us. His resurrection made possible our resurrection.
But there is also something dangerous about the Incarnation. The same humanity
that enables intimacy can also become idolatry of the self. Instead of the true
Jesus, we worship a ‘ghost’ of our own making. Each of us can recognise some
aspect of our own humanity in the Lord Jesus Christ, and that is good news, but
we can just as easily fixate on that reflexion and exalt it inordinately. When
this happens, we are no longer looking at the complete person of Jesus, but
only a mirror image of ourselves.
The beauty of the
Incarnation is that Jesus resembles all of us while resembling none of us. That
tension is the secret to really knowing Jesus. The Incarnated Word makes known
to us the face of the Invisible God. By sending His Son into the world on
Christmas, God upended everything. In revealing the Truth about Himself, He
exploded all the false images based on speculation and human projections,
overturned all our presumptions and revolutionise the way we should view the
world. His Truth calls us to take a step forward in faith, to view things not
from our perspective but from His. If this Truth does not change your mind on a
regular basis, then the god that you worship is not God. Your god is the
convenience of belief.
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