ESTEEM PEOPLE FOR THE RIGHT REASON
Here
 is an anecdote about George Bernard Shaw, a famous Irish playwright. 
The story seems fictional but the message is very true.
        
 A country clergyman, hearing that George Bernard Shaw was an expert in 
brewing his particular brand of coffee, wrote to ask him for his recipe.
 Shaw obliged, adding as an afterthought that he hoped the request was 
not an underhanded way of obtaining his autograph.
        
 In response, the clergyman cut Shaw’s signature from the letter, 
returned it with a note thanking him for the coffee recipe, and 
concluded: “I wrote in good faith, so allow me to return what obviously 
you infinitely prize, but which is of no value to me, your autograph.”
        
 As the playwright in our story valued his autograph for the wrong 
reason, so did the people of Jesus’ time esteem John for the wrong 
reason. They looked at him as a hero, a fiery preacher, and an ascetic 
with a distinctive fashion style. He wore camel’s hair with a leather 
belt and had a unique diet of locusts and wild honey (see Matthew 3:4). 
He was a prime candidate for the role of the long-expected Messiah. Long
 after John the Baptist had died, a group called the Anabaptist held his
 memory as sacred, even pitting John the Baptist against the disciples of Jesus.
        
 In the Gospel today, Jesus tried to explain that John’s greatness was 
founded not so much in his peculiar exterior but in his interiority, in 
his personal holiness, in his determination in renouncing what is 
sinful, in his passion in declaring what is contrary to God’s moral 
code.
        
 In our celebrity-obsessed culture, let us allow the real John the 
Baptist to bring on the triumph of substance over style, of integrity 
over image, of value over convenience. Fr. Joel Jason
REFLECTION QUESTION: How is your heart getting ready for the coming of the Lord?
I lay bare my heart and soul to You, Lord, ready to receive You and allow You to make Your dwelling in me.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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