Third Sunday in
Ordinary Time Year C
Let me start off by stating what is obvious as well as
seemingly contradictory – “Listening is one of the easiest things you’ll ever
do, and also one of the hardest.” In a sense, listening or at least ‘hearing’
is easy – it does not demand the same amount of effort and energy required in
speaking. No one would call you a fool unless you open your mouth. But despite
this ease, or perhaps precisely because of it, we often fight against it. We
would rather trust in our thoughts and opinions, amass our own righteousness
than receive another’s, and speak our thoughts rather than listen to someone
else. Oftentimes we falsely assume that having ears equates to listening. This
is especially applicable to a modern culture that is saturated with headlines,
texts, hashtags, posts, ear buds, and tweets. We are swimming in a sea of words
while listening to very few of them.
Today’s readings remind us that Christians, following
the tradition of the Jews and the Hebrews before them, are intentionally
auditory. Israel was a nation of prophets, not philosophers. Prophets listen to
God. Philosophers envision. For the Greek philosopher, intellectual
understanding came through the eye. For the Hebrew prophet, it came through the
ear. The eye sees and dissects. The ear, on the other hand, hears and obeys.
The Hebrews began their scriptures by saying that God spoke and all came into
existence. The most fundamental statement of the Law (Dt 6:4), begins with the Hebrew
word, “Shema” translated as “Hear” or
“Listen” or “paying attention.” The
logic of the Hebrew scriptures is the logic of revelation and in the logic of
revelation, the most illogical thing is to refuse to listen to the Voice of
God.
It is interesting to note that the etymology of the
word ‘obedience’, which comes from the Latin ‘obedire’, means to listen. In fact, the word “shema” in the Old
Testament means both to listen and to obey. Perhaps, this is one of the reasons
why listening is so under-rated in today’s society that places ‘doing’ or
activism as the benchmark of achievement. In a “just do it” culture, the whole
notion of obedience seems absurd and even anachronistic. Everything in our
culture resists obedience, because we are made to feel that any loss of control
over self-fulfillment is a loss of self. It’s a culture where everyone wants to
be heard, so few ready to listen. Which explains the deafening noise, the
shouting, the incessant bombardment of social media postings that characterises
our modern culture that glorifies self-expresison. Because of the emphasis
placed on freedom, self-will, autonomy and personal determination, obedience
does little to suggest a good life. Obedience seems to be a suffocation of life
rather than the promotion of it.
Yet obedience is a core element of the story of
creation as well as the story of salvation. The first lesson man learnt in the
story of creation was obedience. And the first sin and every other sin
thereafter, is about disobedience. Every covenant God sealed with His people,
every message uttered by the prophets, were calls to obedience. And finally,
obedience is also at the heart of the gospel, it was central to the life of
Jesus and His relationship with the Father, but it also summarises what it
means to be a Christian. Jesus not only listened and obeyed the word of God, He
totally identified with it. Thus, at the end of today’s gospel, He could
confidently announce that He is the fulfillment of the prophetic word. For many
centuries the Jews strained to listen to the Word of God through their
prophets, but then the Word came even closer. The Word became flesh. That is
why the Catechism of the Catholic Church affirms that “the Christian faith is
not a ‘religion of the book’. Christianity is the religion of the ‘Word’ of
God, a word which is ‘not a written and mute word, but the Word is incarnate
and living” (CCC 108).
Today’s readings remind us that obedience is more
about an encounter with this Living Word, Jesus, than about merely following
rules. It is more about effective listening than blind obedience to the dead
letter of the law. It means getting in touch with the voice and life of the
Spirit. The three readings provide us with different levels of listening.
In the first reading, we read about the reconstruction
of the moral and religious fibre of a foundering nation that has lost not only
its independence but also its integrity. The foundation of this reconstruction
would be the Law, which is the name given by Jews to their scriptures. As they
listened attentively to the words of their holy book being read by Ezra the
scribe, the crowd was moved not only to tears but ultimately to worship. For
them, the Law was not just a set of religious and moral rules and obligations,
it was the voice of God, the God that had not abandoned them, the God who was
now restoring their fortune. Thus the first level of listening is listening to
God, a listening which inspires worship, a listening that inspires conversion,
and a listening that demands obedience and surrender to the sovereignty of God.
That is why at every mass, the Liturgy of the Word precedes, and eventually
leads to and culminates in the Liturgy of the Eucharist.
The second reading proposes a second level of
listening. In obedience we also listen to the voice of the Church, the Body of
Christ. In the face of the human heart’s tendency towards narcissism,
individualism and exclusiveness more than towards the needs of the other,
obedience as attentive listening to the other members of the Body of Christ
frees us to live for the other and become an integral part of the family, we
call Church. Obedience can challenge our worldviews and prejudices which often
filters our perception of God’s will.
Finally, the gospel speaks of the third level of
listening – listening to the poor, the oppressed, and the marginalised. By
citing a text from Isaiah, Luke attempts to explain Jesus’ mission as a
proclamation of gladness for the poor, liberty for the captives, sight for the
blind, release for prisoners and a year of favour for all. These categories are
often regarded by the larger society as invisible, thus not deserving its attention
or time. The rich and the powerful have our ears, but not the poor. Thus, the
cries of the poor are a great corrective to our self-importance, selfishness
and pride. If our heart’s desires are gifts from God, then listening to the
cries of the poor reveals the demands these gifts make on us. Any Christian
life which does not listen to the voice of the poor effectively shuts out the
voice of God.
Christ’s powerful words spoken to us at Mass are meant
to change things, to change us, to change the hearts and the lives of all who
hear them. Every mass requires more than just our attention, it demands a total
investment of ourselves, it demands obedience. Unless you are deaf or hard of
hearing, you should put aside your missals (and smart phones). These are useful
tools to prepare for holy mass, but when the mass begins, we should put these
aside. This is because reading along and listening attentively are very
different activities and have very different results. In a certain way, when we
read the Word during the mass, we continue to assert mastery over the word by
subjecting it to all forms of analyses. But we are a people called to ‘listen.’
Now, this is much harder than reading. Listening makes us uncomfortable because
we strain to listen not just with our ears but also with our hearts. Listening
treats the word in a personal way, rather than just a subject to be studied.
Listening is relational. Thus, we listen to God, we do not read or study Him.
In listening, we make no demands of the Word – we merely listen, embrace the
Word and obey. We seek not to substitute the Word with our words. But rather we
allow the Word to form, challenge, comfort and finally consume us.
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