When God shared a secret- Wednesday, 15th week in ordinary time- Matthew 11: 25-27

The gospel of today is both a prayer and a cry of jubilation in the face of rejection. Jesus has bewailed the fate of Capernaum, Bethsaida and Chorazin, not merely for their lack of faith but their unwillingness to transform and repent. In this, they failed and the ground for tragedy is laid.

In the face of their incredulity, Jesus breaks into a public prayer of praise.  Although the prayer begins with a typical Jewish blessing formula, He goes on to make it very intimate. Here, as in so many places we see Jesus breaking out into prayer publicly. He was not afraid or ashamed to pray.  Five times in three verses He will call out to His Father, Abba, proclaiming His closeness to the Father.

What is at the heart of this prayer and why does Jesus make it? Verses 25 and 27 consist of the prayer itself and are a ‘thanksgiving for revelation’. Verse 27 reveals the contents of that revelation, and what we will read in tomorrow’s gospel is the invitation that stems from this revelation.

The prayer is a thanksgiving for the revelation that the Father has shared. This revelation however has been screened and hidden from those like the Pharisees, who continue to live in their arrogance of wisdom. Yet it is those who are uneducated who seem to grasp the mysteries of the kingdom!

Verse 26 tells us that God does this out of His “gracious will”.  God does not have to be bought by our little trifles which we have to offer Him, however kindly He may look upon them. This is His predilection; it is He who loves us first and loves us freely that makes us worthy of His revelation to us.

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Commission or Omission? Tuesday, 15th week in ordinary time- Matthew 11: 20-24

The mission discourse is now behind us and the next two chapters before the next discourse, the ‘parable discourse’, comprise of a series of incidences where Jesus is rejected.  All through chapters eleven and twelve, we will constantly encounter the rejection of Jesus by His generation.

A reading of verses 16-19 gives us a clear understanding of the rejection Jesus faced. Nothing He does seems to make the people happy. They won’t dance when the flute is played, they won’t mourn when the dirge is sung.  For that matter, the life of John the Baptist was too austere for them and the life of Jesus was too debaucherous. It seemed like they wanted an omelette but did not want to break eggs.

So, early into the ‘rejection passages’, Jesus decides to set the record straight and He intends to do it first with His own. His condemnation is not without justification. It is within the walls of these three contemporary cities, situated on the northwest shore of Galilee, that He worked some amazing miracles.

Not only did He work great miracles here but verse twenty tells us that He had worked ‘most of His deeds of power here’. These are cities that Jesus and His disciples were familiar with. Capernaum was Jesus’ ministerial base. Peter came from Capernaum and Jesus worked as many as seven great miracles here. Bethsaida was the home of Andrew and Philip, to say nothing of the great miracle where Jesus had fed thousands. Yet belief is hard to come by and so condemnation from Jesus is swift and harsh.

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Thinking things through- Monday, 15th week in ordinary time- Matthew 10:34-11:1

If Jesus were a salesman in the modern world, He would have surely lost His job. The art of waxing eloquent was certainly not his forte.  One would have thought that Jesus would have at least made the mission discourse exciting, an adventure filled trip to lure more people to the cause. Instead He promised a hard trek down some dusty and challenging roads. The sales pitch  that He made, would have effectively driven away any prospective disciple.

Just when it sounds like it can’t get any worse, Jesus drops another bombshell. He says He has not come to bring peace to the earth but the sword. Rather strange words from the very one who came to be the ‘Prince of peace’ and who called peacemakers, blessed.

Lest we misunderstand the Lord, His intention is not to bring about bloodshed. The regrettable side effect of the Gospel is division, resulting from the uncompromising proclamation of the kingdom. The mission discourse clearly outlines the great challenges that the disciple must face in taking the Good News to the world along with the side effects it brings.  For Jesus, this is moment when decisions have to be made. We are with Him in mission or we are not!

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ON THE FIELD: ‘The Sower’ by James Tissot

A new dawn sets in. The Sower begins his day as he treads along his fields. He sows the seeds, hoping for a bountiful harvest.

‘Le Semeur’ or ‘The Sower’ by James Tissot is executed in opaque watercolour over graphite on grey wove paper. It beckons a narrative beyond visual display.

Jacques Joseph Tissot, later anglicized as James Tissot, was born near the busy port of Nantes, France in 1836 to a prosperous draper. At the age of 17, he embarked upon his artistic mission. James Tissot’s career spanned three successful periods. In the first phase in Paris (1859-1870), he enjoyed great success as a high-society painter. He lived among aristocratic neighbours near the Arc De Triomphe in Paris. His leisured and charmed life was soon skewered among the struggles of the French Revolution.

The fall of the Second Empire in 1870 and the bloody Franco Prussian war in 1871 compelled him to flee to London. Here, from 1871 to 1882, his career soared for the second time within the competitive artistic circles. However his successful 11 year sojourn ended in an emotional disaster. In 1882, his dearly loved mistress, Kathleen Newton died of consumption.

While working on a series of paintings themed, ‘The Woman of Paris’, James Tissot visited the Church of St. Sulpice in order to sketch the portrait of a choir singer. Here he encountered a vision of Christ tending to the broken and the down trodden. This was his route to Damascus; his Metanoia! The experience he had led to a renewal of his faith and a shift in his artistic focus.

He took off on a research trip to Holy Land, beginning his 10 year campaign to illustrate the New Testament. The result was ‘The Life of Christ’ popularly called ‘the Tissot Bible.’ It is a monumental series of 350 water coloured imagery with profuse archaeological observation and lucid realism.

‘The Sower’ forms a part of the representations in the ‘Life of Christ.’ It elucidates the Parable of the parables in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 13:1 to 23. Tissot presents the Sower as a 1st century Palestine farmer and not like the 19th century European peasant. This is indicated by the barefooted vigorous sturdy body and the dressing pattern.  The use of the sash was a Jewish custom by law which separated the ‘chosen ones’ from the pagans.  In addition, the scarf was a typical Jewish head gear which held the Jewish name for God (J.H.V.H) at its four corners.

In this painting, the sower moves with an engaging palpability as the elements of the Gospel surround him. His left hand holds on to a robe created pouch of seeds, while his right hand scatters the grain in a sweeping motion of the arm. A flock of birds break forth across the horizon. A group of weeds sway in the morn. The north easterly winds waft the air. The partially rocky terrain flows through the land. Yet the sower walks upright, undeterred. His outstretched arm is reminiscent of the Saviour preaching the Word.

The technique of sowing is evocative of the practice of farming in 1st century Palestine. Sowing often preceded ploughing and followed the broadcast method. The unfenced fields featured as long strips with a common path beaten hard by the feet of passer bys. Occasional patches consisted of a thin skin of earth on top of an underlying shelf of limestone rock. Weeds like tares and thorns laid in ambush. It is this terrain that the painter tries to bring to life to enhance the viewer’s understanding of the parable. Thus the painting by Tissot is a truce of the mystical and the ideal with passionate realism.

Jesus preaches this parable to an audience who is familiar with the agricultural system of first century Galilee. The Sower sows and the seed grows depending on the receptivity of the soil of one’s heart. It draws us to the heart of the Sower Himself who does not force faith, rather advocates Love; Love that respects freedom and truth!

The Archdiocesan Heritage Museum is open from Tuesday to Sunday from 9am to 5pm.

For a guided tour please contact 022 – 29271557

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Prepared not paralyzed- Saturday, 14th week in ordinary time- Matthew 10: 24-33

The last part of the mission discourse highlights the courage that the apostles need to have. Jesus has clearly spelt out what He expects from his apostles and what they are to expect when they go out in His name. Jesus however, does not leave his apostles abandoned in the face of vengeful religious bigots.  He wants them to be unafraid knowing that He is with them.

Fear is good! It’s foolish to be fearless in the face of a tiger. Only a stupid man would treat a wild tiger like he would treat a domesticated cat.  Fear helps us to be cautious and take precautions, lest we throw ourselves in harm’s way.

However, fear that constantly paralyzes us is harmful. I presume when Jesus says, “do not worry, and do not fear” He is calling his disciples to place their trust in Him. If His eye is on the sparrow, insignificant as this bird may seem, then how much more is His eye on us?

St Matthew clearly understood the dangers his infant community faced from the Jews. The Early Christians had faced persecutions that ranged from flogging to death.  The ‘them’ of verse twenty six was clear; Matthew knew who the adversaries were and the pain and persecution they could unleash. He wants his community to be prepared, yet not paralyzed, by what they are to encounter.

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