A NEW TEACHING WITH AUTHORITY
“Authority” is an interesting English word. Its root has nothing to do with the
stature of the one who holds it, but with the stature of those who
benefit from dealings with those who have it. The word “author” also
comes from the same root — auctor — and it means one who fosters growth,
progress, development and fullness.
The Lord taught with authority. Last thing I heard, carpenters have no natural
authority. Neither do fishermen, whose only expertise has to do with
mending nets, counting catch, and calculating cash receipts.
I was fortunate to have known for a short while a holy priest back in
my days as a greenhorn in Don Bosco-Mandaluyong. Fr. Maurilio Candusso
knew very little English, and knew next to nothing of Tagalog. But he
had a big heart and an even bigger love for everyone, particularly the
poor ones. He was a machinist and a priest, not necessarily in that
order. He said nothing extraordinary but he taught with authority, for
he taught with the end in view of making young people grow — in all
senses of the term.
I feel blessed, too, to have taken a few courses under a revered
Redemptorist Moral Theology professor at the Accademia Alfonsiana in
Rome,
Italy. His enrollees simply overflowed every time. Soft-spoken and
gentle, he had a big heart, and an even bigger love for the Church.
Speaking only in Italian, he nevertheless taught with authority, for he
made us feel we were peers on the way to becoming experts like he was.
Here comes a carpenter with His band of brothers who are as ordinary as
He is! He enters a synagogue and begins teaching. His aim is to impart
wisdom, not to impress. His goal is to liberate people, not to perorate
over their heads. His vision was to
lead men and women to fulfillment, not just to fill them with spiritual
or material goodies. And He does not just preach and teach. He comes
with the gift of His person as healer and enabler as Good Shepherd. And
He does all these with authority. Fr. Chito Dimaranan, SDB
REFLECTION
QUESTIONS: Are you a person of authority — at work, in your family, in
your ministry? How do you exercise your authority?
Teach me to be humble and to serve through the authority that You have given me, Lord.
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