THEOLOGICAL PASSIVES
The
words we read in today’s Gospel come after the time Jesus taught the
disciples at length about prayer and about dependence on God. Jesus, in
the process, revealed to the disciples that as we approach God, the most
evocative image we must have about Him is not His powerfulness, but His
being Creator and Father. Jesus revealed that as Father, God is “Abba,”
a Father who is personally concerned about us. This strand of teaching
continues to echo in our Gospel reading today as we hear Jesus say, “If
you, then, who are evil, know how to give your children what is good,
how much more will your Father in heaven give good things to those who
ask
him?”
There
is, however, another thing to note in our Gospel passage. The familiar
opening lines, “Ask, and it will be given to you; search, and you will
find; knock and the door will be opened to you,” are passive
constructions. The ones addressed, that is us, are receivers of the
action, but the doer is not mentioned explicitly. Only implicitly do we
infer that the doer could be no one else but God. In a simpler way, the
expression could have been: “Ask, and it will be given to you by God;
search, and you will find God; knock and the door will be opened to you
by God.”
The
phrasing of Jesus’ teaching implies God as the most important doer, and
yet it avoids using the name of God. Hence, “theological passives.” With
this style of language, we are made to understand that, in all our
prayers, God is there — unseen, yet listening to us, and acting
according to what He knows is best for us.
We
do not have to see His ways, and feel Him always. We simply need to be
open and trusting. His name “YHWH” must be enough: “I Am He Who Is,” “I
Am Who I Am,” “I Am Who Am.” And to this, we say, “Amen!” Fr. Domie Guzman, SSP
REFLECTION
QUESTIONS: How comfortable, trusting and at home are you with God as
the “Unseen Father”? What are your most cherished experiences of His
goodness? Are you a doer in faith, or are you one who waits in faith?
Increase my faith, Lord, not only as I wait, but as I follow You in moments of darkness.
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