Sacred Scriptures/Liturgy- Commentary on Sunday's Readings |
The Kingdom of God is at
Hand!
14th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa, OFMCap, Pontifical Household Preacher
www.zenit.org
Isaiah 66:10-14c; Galatians 6:16-18; Luke 10:1-12, 17-20
Again we will comment on Sunday's Gospel with the help of Benedict
XVI's book on Jesus. First, however, I would like to make an
observation of a general nature. The criticism that has been made of
the Pope's book by some is that it sticks to what the Gospels say
without taking into account the findings of modern historical
research which, according to them, would lead to very different
conclusions.
What we have here is a widespread idea that is nourishing a whole
literature like Dan Brown's "Da Vinci Code" and popularizing
historical works based on the same presupposition.
I think that it is important to shed light on a fundamental
equivocation in all of this. The idea of an historical investigation
into Jesus that is unified, rectilinear, that moves unswervingly
toward completely illuminating him, is a pure myth that some are
trying to convince people of but which no serious historian today
believes possible.
I quote one of the more well-known representatives of historical
research on Jesus, the American Paula Fredriksen: "In recent
scholarship, Jesus has been imagined and presented as a type of
first-century shaman figure; as a Cynic-sort of wandering wise man;
as a visionary radical and social reformer preaching egalitarian
ethics to the destitute; as a Galilean regionalist alienated from
the elitism of Judean religious conventions (like Temple and Torah);
as a champion of national liberation and, on the contrary, as its
opponent and critic -- on and on.
"All these figures are presented with rigorous academic argument and
methodology; all are defended with appeals to the ancient data.
Debate continues at a roiling pitch, and consensus -- even on issues
so basic as what constitutes evidence and how to construe it --
seems a distant hope."
Often an appeal is made to new data and recent discoveries which
would finally put historical research in an advantageous place with
regard to the past. But the variety of the consequences that can be
drawn from these new historical sources appears from the fact that
they have given rise to two opposed and irreconcilable images of
Christ that are still in play. On one hand, a Jesus who "is in all
and for all Jewish"; on the other hand, a Jesus who is a child of
the Helenized Galilee of his time, strongly influenced the
philosophy of cynicism.
In light of this fact I ask: What was the Pope supposed to do,
compose yet another historical reconstruction in which all the
contrary objections debate and combat each other? What the Pope
chose to do was to positively present the figure and teaching of
Jesus as he is understood by the Church, taking his point of
departure from the conviction that the Christ of the Gospels is,
even from the historical point of view, the figure that is the most
credible and certain.
After these clarifications, let us turn to this Sunday's Gospel. It
is the episode of the sending out of 72 disciples on mission. After
having told them how they are supposed to go out (two by two, like
lambs, without money), Jesus explains to them what they must say:
"Tell them: 'The kingdom of God is at hand.'"
We know that the phrase "The kingdom of God is at hand" is at the
heart of Jesus' preaching and is the premise of each of his
teachings. The kingdom of God is at hand, so love your enemies; the
kingdom of God is at hand, so if your hand is a scandal to you, cut
it off. It is better to enter the kingdom of God without a hand than
to remain outside of it with both hands. Everything takes its
meaning from the kingdom.
There has always been discussion about what, precisely, Jesus meant
by the expression "kingdom of God." For some it would be a purely
interior kingdom consisting in a life conformed to the law of God;
for others, on the contrary, it would be a social and political
kingdom to be realized by man, even by struggle and revolution if
necessary.
The Pope reviews these various interpretations of the past and
points to what they have in common: The center of interest moves
from God to man; it is no longer a kingdom of God but a kingdom of
man, who is its principal architect. This is an idea of a kingdom
that, at the limit, is also compatible with atheism.
In Jesus' preaching the coming of the kingdom of God means that,
sending his Son into the world, God has decided, so to speak, to
personally take in hand the fortunes of the world, to compromise
himself with it, to act in the world from the inside. It is easier
to intuit what the kingdom of God means than to explain it because
it is a reality that transcends every explanation.
The idea is still much diffused that Jesus expected the end of the
world to be imminent and therefore the kingdom of God that he
preached is not to be realized in this world but in the one we call
the "hereafter."
In effect, the Gospels contain some affirmations that lend
themselves to this interpretation. But if we look at the whole of
Jesus' teaching this does not jibe. According to C.H. Dodd, Jesus'
teaching is not an ethics for those who are expecting a rapid end to
the world, but for those who have experienced the end of this world
and the coming into it of the kingdom of God.
It is for those who know that "the old things are past" and that the
world has become a "new creation," since God has descended as king.
In other words, Jesus did not announce the end of "the" world but
the end of "a" world, and in that the facts have not told against
him.
But John the Baptist also preached this change, speaking of an
imminent judgment of God. In what, then, consists the newness of
Christ? The newness is entirely enclosed within an adverb of time:
"now." With Jesus the kingdom of God is no longer only something
"imminent." It is present. "The new and exclusive message of Jesus,"
the Pope writes, "consists in the fact that he says: God acts now --
this is the hour in which God, in a way that goes beyond all
previous modalities, reveals himself in history as its Lord, as the
living God."
From here flows that sense of urgency that is present in all of
Jesus' parables, especially the so-called parables of the kingdom.
The decisive moment of history has arrived, now is the moment to
make the decision that saves; the feast is ready; to refuse to enter
because you have just taken a wife or bought a pair of oxen or for
some other reason, is to be excluded forever and see your place
taken by others.
From this last reflection let us move to a practical and
contemporary application of the message we have heard. What Jesus
said to the people of his time is also valid for us today. That
"now" and "today" will remain immutable until the end of the world
(Hebrews 3:13).
That means that the person who today hears, perhaps by chance,
Christ's word: "The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is at
hand; convert and believe in the Gospel" (Mark 1:15), finds himself
faced with the same choice as those who heard it 2000 years ago in a
Galilean village: Either believe and enter the kingdom or refuse to
believe and remain outside.
Unfortunately, the first option -- believing -- seems to be the last
concern of many who read the Gospel and write books about it. Rather
than submitting themselves to Christ's judgment, many judge him.
Today more than ever Jesus is on trial. It is a kind of "universal
judgment" turned upside down. Scholars run this risk above all. The
scholar must "dominate" the object of the science that he cultivates
and remain neutral before it; but how is one supposed to "dominate"
or remain neutral before an object when it is Jesus Christ? In this
case one must let himself instead be dominated by, and not be the
dominator of his object.
The kingdom of God was so important for Jesus that he taught us to
pray every day for its coming. We turn to God saying, "Thy kingdom
come," but God also turns to us and says through Jesus: "The kingdom
of God is at hand, do not wait, enter!"
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Mary