A WAY TO BE FREE AND FEARLESS
I
have always taken the words of Jesus in our Gospel as declaration of
the Christian ethics of being careful and fair in judging people. I
followed the traditional way of reading through the words of Jesus as
indications for the deeper virtues of mercy and charity.
What I read about the ministry of Jesus in the Jesuit priest James
Martin’s book, Jesus: A Pilgrimage (HarperCollins: 2014), makes me
rethink the words of Jesus — that is, from the point of view of His
method of doing His mission. Jesus did not preach with “detached” and
“indifferent” words. His words and wisdom embodied His very manner of
living each day. He did not preach what He never did in the first place.
There is no doubt that Jesus is mercy and compassion in person. He
truly cared, with pure intention, about helping people. He was immersed
in the situations, especially of the poor. However, when it came to His
decision on courses of action and on values, He did not do these to
please people. He cared less about what people will say or how they will
react. He was free and unafraid once He is able to discern what is the
Heavenly Father’s will.
A person who loves to judge others is a person who looks at others too
much. The person judges first, for he is afraid of being judged first.
He is many times too concerned about “likability” and “acceptability.”
Taken from a fresh angle and a new light, Jesus’ words in today’s
Gospel are a call to be unfraid and free — by being independent of
society’s usual way of putting up expectations and social conventions.
True freedom of action and values comes not when we allow other’s
opinions to dictate on us what is right; rather, freedom comes by being
true to oneself as one stands before God. Fr. Domie Guzman, SSP
REFLECTION
QUESTIONS: Are you, to a greater part, a “crowd pleaser”? How has this
affected your decision-making and commitments? What enlightenment does
today’s Gospel give you?
Dear Lord, help me to set my eyes on You, and not to please people. Enable me to follow You.
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