Date: The First Sunday After Trinity (June 10, 2012)
Text: Mark 3:19-35
I
The door to Mary’s house shakes as it is
pounded from the outside. Mary opens the door to a familiar face: “Jesus has
come home, Mary. Come quickly.” Mary snaps into motion, and calling Jesus’
brothers together, they walk out the door, as the Gospel of Mark says, “to
restrain him.”
They pass a crowd of people. She
overhears, “Who does he think he is? The scribes from Jerusalem will sort him
out.” Mary knows the religious teachers can be dangerous. She quickens her
pace.
As Mary and the boys approach, she hears
her son’s voice inside the house, “But whoever blasphemes against the Holy
Spirit can never have forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin.” Through
the door, she sees the faces of the scribes. One is ashen. The other is angry.
The angry one grabs the other and pushes him towards the door. One mumbles to
the other, “He has gone out of his mind.”
The house itself is full to over-flowing.
Jesus is sitting and teaching in the middle of the room, and everyone is
sitting in a circle around him. Mary and Jesus’ brothers are outside, on the
periphery. But, Mary has come to get her son to the safety of her home, so she
passes word through the crowd. Someone leans over and whispers in Jesus’ ear.
His eyes open in surprise. He looks through the doorway at his mother and says
so that everyone can hear, “Who are my mother and my brothers?” And looking at
those sitting around him, he says, as Mark testifies, “Here are my mother and
my brothers! Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother.”
Mary looks at her son, shocked and probably offended. Jesus has refused to come
home.
II
Here in the 21st century, we
try to bring Jesus home with us all the time, sometimes in good ways, sometimes
in bad. When I was in high school, a friend taught me a song. It starts out,
and you’ll have to imagine the country and western style, “I don’t care if it
rains for freezes, as long as I’ve got my plastic Jesus sitting on the
dashboard of my car. Comes in colours pink and pleasant, glows in the dark
‘cause it’s iridescent, take it with you when you travel far.” This is probably
one example of the bad way of bringing Jesus home with us.
Another of these were the
once-ubiquitous “What would Jesus Do?” bracelets. They were there to remind you
to be intentional about the way you lived, a laudable goal! But the problem
was, looking around, everyone came up with different answers. For the Baptists,
Jesus would never drink, smoke, or dance. For the Catholics, Jesus would do all
of those things. For the Christian Right, Jesus wouldn’t vote for a liberal.
For the Christian Left, Jesus wouldn’t vote for a conservative. For some, Jesus
was a man of tolerance and peace, a hippie before his time. For others, Jesus
was a stalwart defender of the Truth with a capital T, a fundamentalist before
his time.
But, for every follower of Jesus, there
is a moment when we walk up to the house like Mary did, and we try to call
Jesus back home, when we try to remove him from the centre and turn him into
the plastic Jesus we can put in our car. As we stand on the outside, and our
message is passed on to Jesus at the centre of the seated learners, Jesus looks
straight at us and says, “Who are my mother and brothers?” Jesus refuses to
come home with us, too.
III
Jesus refuses to go home with his
mother, because he was starting a new family. Before Jesus’ confrontation with
the scribes, he was on a whirlwind tour, healing illnesses and casting out
demons. Just before returning home, he chose twelve disciples who would later,
minus one, become the apostles we remember and revere. And then he comes home,
but the crowd is not far behind him. There are so many that he can’t even eat. But
instead of turning them away, he sits down in the house and begins to teach.
But, his fame is spreading too quickly. Scribes come down from Jerusalem and make
the accusation that Jesus’ power and influence come from an ominous source. As
Mark has them say, “He has Beelzebul, and by the ruler of demons he casts out
demons.”
The seated crowd at Jesus’ feet goes
silent. Seconds tick by. Jesus answers, only indirectly, saying that if a
Kingdom or a Household were internally divided then they would not stand. Can
Satan be divided against himself? No, he says, I am the one raiding Satan’s
house, not vice versa. I am the one breaking through, the one breaking in, and my
ministry of healing and exorcism is a sign of a new Kingdom, a new House, a new
Family. And when you scribes say that the Kingdom of God comes by the agency of
evil spirits, you are blaspheming against God himself.
One of the scribes goes ashen. The other
mutters angrily. One grabs the other and starts pushing towards the door, past
Mary and the boys. After a moment, someone leans over to Jesus and says, “Your
mother and your brothers are outside, asking for you.” Jesus looks up in
surprise – all this talk of Kingdoms and Houses wasn’t meant to be about his house, the place where his mother
and brothers live. But, then, he realizes, no, it really was. A house divided
against itself cannot stand, and the woman who bore him, his natural family,
has come to collect him, to tie him up and bring him to her home. “Who are my mother and my brothers?” he asks. It is those
who choose to sit at Jesus’ feet and hear his teaching, those who do the will
of God. THOSE are Jesus’ brother and sister and mother. Jesus came to start a
new family that could include, but extended far beyond, his earthly mother and
brothers.
IV
St. Bene’t’s has a statue of the Virgin
Mary holding her son. Throughout the history of the Church, Mary has been
represented with the baby Jesus in her arms. If you look at these pictures,
even though Our Lady is often the centre-piece, Jesus is obviously the object.
If she looks out of the picture, she is pointing to Jesus. If her eyes are focused
elsewhere, they are on Jesus. Whatever else happened that day when Jesus
started a new family, the Church remembers that Mary learned a lesson – that
her family was not the centre of her world, that Jesus was the centre, and that
Jesus needed to stay in the centre always.
Jesus calls us to belong with him. When
a parent brings a child to be baptized, they are in effect saying that they
want their child to be a part of Jesus’ new family, to live a life with Jesus
at the centre. Today, when baby Felix comes out from under the water, he will
be reborn into this new family. In effect, his godparents will carry him into
the room where Jesus sits teaching the crowd. They will sit and listen and
learn with Felix in tow. Over the course of years, Felix will grow up and ask
questions, and he will come to a moment in his life where he comes to call
Jesus back to his house, to his party, to his understanding of the world. And Jesus will ask him, “Who is my
family?” And then, as he has done for all of us, Jesus will look around at the
simple, the lame, the weak, the rich and poor, the Baptists and Catholics, the conservatives
and liberals, the hippies and fundamentalists, all who have put down their
placards to sit at his feet, and he will say “Here are my mother and my
brothers! Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother.
Sit. Listen. Learn.”
Where are we, then? Are we standing on
the outside, calling to Jesus to come home with us? Or, are we here willing to
be made a part of Jesus’ family? Every week we have that choice, as we come again
to the Table of our Lord. We have here an opportunity to sit down again at
Jesus’ feet, to become part of his family, to learn again how to love God,
ourselves, and our neighbours. May we be the people who stop trying to co-opt
Jesus and his message for our own purposes. May we be the people who sit down
at Jesus’ feet as part of his new
family.
In
the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
**Virgin Mary photo by Matic Zupancic
**Dashboard Jesus photo by scasha
**Jesus icon photo by Dimitri Castrique
**Mary and Child icon, copyright TatianaVartanova
2 comments:
Thanks Jason, for this personal and intensely relevant take on a difficult gospel passage. I never thought about the context and you made me realise that Jesus could NOT have gone out to see his mother and brothers without destroying (or at least distorting) the message he had just delivered.
Thanks for the comment, Gavin!
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