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The
Conditions of True Discipleship
September 9, 2007
Readings for the 23rd
Sunday in Ordinary Time
| Reading
1: Wis. 9:13–18 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 90:3–4, 5–6, 12–13, 14–17 |
| Reading
2: Philem. 9–10,12–17 |
| Gospel:
Lk. 14:25–33 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Father Roger J. Landry
In the first reading,
the Book of Wisdom queries, “For who can learn the counsel
of God? Or who can discern what the Lord wills?” Mary,
the Seat of Wisdom, takes us directly to her Son, Wisdom Incarnate,
who gives us His counsel in straight-talk and tells us directly
what He wills for us. He instructs us very plainly on what
it takes to be His disciple. We have come precisely so that
we might become better disciples, imitating Mary, in following
her Son. Let us listen to Him as He challenges us to become
whom He created us to be.
Jesus tells us
that there are three conditions for us to be His disciple:
1) “Whoever
comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and
children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself,
cannot be my disciple.”
2) “Whoever does not carry the cross and follow me cannot
be my disciple.”
3) “None of you can become my disciple if you do not
give up all your possessions.”
This is no small
order. To be Jesus’ disciple, to enter into His kingdom,
requires a DECISIVE CHOICE. One has got to be willing to “pluck
out one’s eyes,” “to cut off one’s
hands,” if that’s what it takes to follow Him.
We have got to be willing even to lose our life, because it
is only the one who loses his life that will find it again
it God.
Many people today
do not recognize the seriousness of the call of Jesus. The
people in Jesus’ own day had a similar problem. For
centuries, they anticipated that a Messiah would come, overwhelm
all foreign powers, and they would ride his coattails to great
triumph and riches. They were unprepared for the Cross, for
suffering, for struggle. Jesus tries to disabuse them of these
false impressions by giving us the path to true wisdom and
happiness in the Gospel. We can take each of the three conditions
in turn.
Hate
Your Father and Mother?
“Whoever
comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and
children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself,
cannot be my disciple.”
On the face of
it, this seems almost too tough to have come from the mouth
of Jesus. It also seems to contradict other things God has
told us. Didn’t God tell us in the fourth commandment
of the Decalogue, “Honor your father and mother?”
How can Jesus now be telling us to hate them? Didn’t
Jesus say that in marriage, man and woman leave their parents
cling to each other and become one flesh? Didn’t God
tell us through St. Paul that husbands should love their wives
as Christ loved the Church and gave His life to make her holy?
How can He now be telling us to hate spouses? Didn’t
He in fact tell us that we had to love even our enemies? How
could He be calling us to love them and hate our family members?
In order to resolve
these questions, we need to have an understanding of Hebrew
and Aramaic. In these ancient languages, they really had no
way to make comparisons like we do in English. In order to
express loving someone over another, they generally said they
would “love” one and “hate” whoever
was second or below. In St. Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus
said the same truth in a perhaps clearer way, “Whoever
loves Father and mother more than me is not worthy of me”
(Mt. 10:37). Jesus was saying that there could only be one
absolute in our life. Only one love could have primacy. Only
one thing could have man’s ultimate obedience and affection.
That is God.
This teaching
of Jesus is therefore very concrete and leads to an examination
of conscience this morning. Do we love Jesus more than everyone
else? Do we prefer Him to parents, to spouses, to children,
to our own lives? Do we love Him with “all our mind,
heart, soul, and strength,” or does something else get
our mind, heart, soul, and strength? Jesus cannot be merely
a part of our life. He cannot be just an important “ingredient”
in our life, occupying an important “niche” in
our personal portfolio. He must be God.
Practical
Applications
This gets very
practical sometimes. I remember last summer preaching on what
Jesus said in St. Mark’s Gospel, “Whoever divorces
his wife and marries another commits adultery against her;
and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits
adultery.” I preached it as tenderly as I could, but
after Mass a few couples came to me saying how “hurtful”
what I preached was to them, how such words make it hard for
them to come to Mass. I asked them what their personal situation
was. In each case, they had been divorced and remarried outside
of the Church without having even investigated whether their
first marriage might have been null from the beginning. After
helping them to see that I was merely echoing Jesus’
words and that the Church wasn’t “making up”
a teaching on divorce-and-remarriage, I asked them whether
they love Jesus more than they love their new spouses. They
paused. I asked them if they had to make a choice between
Jesus and their new spouses, whom would they choose? They
paused again. Then they asked why they couldn’t have
“both.” I said that might be possible, if their
first marriages were null, but until that time, they cannot
have both and have to choose; that unless you love Jesus to
the point of “hating” all others, you’re
not worthy to be His disciple.
The same thing
often comes up in work and family situations. So many times
in the last year, people have told me that they cannot come
to Mass because they “have to work” or “have
to take their kids to play hockey or soccer” or countless
other things they “have to” to do on the Lord’s
day. When it comes to compromising one’s commitments
to God, many people do so easily, but not when it comes to
compromising with work, or with sports leagues. If, when there’s
a conflict between one’s obligations to God and one’s
obligations to something else, if God loses, then one is not
truly being a disciple, not putting God first.
The clearest
example of loving God more than all other loves comes with
whether we try to compromise in any way with sin, to give
us an excuse to do something that would displease God even
in a little way. The early saints had a motto, “Better
to die than to sin.” If it came to God or to anything
else that they wanted that might displease God, they always
chose God. The paramount example of this is martyrdom. The
martyrs wouldn’t sacrifice their obligations toward
God even for the sake of saving their own lives. They are
His true disciples. That’s why Jesus said, “Whoever
comes to me and does not hate . . . even life itself, cannot
be my disciple.” For a true disciple, our fidelity to
God is more important than our physical existence. Jesus’
words in the Gospel are very appropriate here: “For
those who want to save their life will lose it, and those
who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel,
will save it” (Mk. 8:35).
Crucified
with Christ
The second condition
Jesus specified is “Whoever does not carry the cross
and follow me cannot be my disciple.”
There are many
Christians today, including some priests, who seem to behave
as if Jesus said, “Pick up your pillow, pick up your
warm blanket, and follow me.” Jesus talked about the
CROSS, and he did so BEFORE his crucifixion, before his disciples
could fully understand what Jesus had prophesied, that we
would die hammer to a Cross. So the thrust of Jesus’
words must have been even more shocking. It would be as if
Jesus said today, “Pick up your noose and follow me.
. . . Grab your potassium cyanide, get a hold of your lethal
injection: Let’s get going.” Jesus was telling
us to take hold of the very thing that crucifies us, that
kills us. The point in carrying the Cross each day is not
just putting some more weight on our shoulders that we can
offer up to please the Lord. The point of crucifixion is so
that WE MIGHT DIE, die to ourselves, so that Jesus might LIVE.
Do we pick up this Cross each day? What does it look like?
Do we allow ourselves to die to ourselves, to our egos, to
our own will on it, or do we fight against it with an increased
pride and individuality?
Jesus
Groupies
The third condition
is, “None of you can become my disciple if you do not
give up all your possessions.”
Jesus said these
words after His analogy of the man’s building a tower
and the king’s going into battle. Then He said, “in
the same way,” we would be as foolish trying to be His
disciple without giving up all our possessions. We can’t
do it. We won’t follow through. This seems to be a shocking
condition. Jesus was driving at something He had said elsewhere
in the Gospel. “No one can serve two masters; for he
will either hate the one and love the other, or be devoted
to the one and despise the other” (Mt. 6:24). He then
gave that sentence a clear practical application: “You
cannot serve both God and money” (Mt. 6:24).
By His statement
about giving up all our possessions, Jesus does not mean that
we necessarily have to liquidate our bank accounts tomorrow,
but He does mean that ALL of our possessions need to be given
to God, dedicated to His service. We’re stewards, not
owners, of everything we think we own. Everything we have
God has given to us. He calls us to use it for His service.
Feeding our families obviously constitutes a part of that
stewardship to God, as is providing proper shelter, clothing,
education, etc., but it constitutes a part. We’re going
to be called to give God an accounting of all the “talents,”
all the resources He has put at our disposal (cf. Mt. 25:14–30).
Do our things own us or does God own them? Are we attached
to them, or detached from them? If we’re attached to
our things, Jesus tells us today, we cannot be His disciple.
These are tough
words, and a person who wants to be a true disciple of Jesus
will act on them with God’s help. Jesus has a lot of
groupies today. He has a lot of fans. But I’m not sure
how many true disciples He has, disciples who live by these
criteria.
There’s a
story I first heard in Italy of a male porn star who was being
interviewed by a reporter. The reporter discovered that the
porn star had gone to the Catholic University of Milan and
asked him if he had felt uncomfortable there. The actor said
that, on the contrary, he loved it there and had some great
courses. He described his favorite course, given by a famous
ethics professor. The actor described how he sat in the front
row, took great notes, asked questions (a relatively rare
thing in Italy) and aced the final exam. The reporter thought
it might be an interesting angle to go interview that professor
for the story. She asked the professor if he remembered his
now-famous student. The professor replied, “He was never
my student.” The reporter replied, “But he said
he sat in the front row, used to ask questions, and did superbly
on your final exam.” “That is all true, but he
was never my student,” the professor retorted. The reporter
was confused, so the professor clarified. “To be a student
means to do more than attend some lectures and give the teacher
back what the teacher taught. Especially in an ethics class,
to be a student means to put what the teacher says INTO PRACTICE,
and that man was NEVER my student.”
Zealous
Disciples
The word “disciple”
comes from the Greek word for “student” or “learner.”
I wonder how many people today treat Jesus the way that porn
star treated his Catholic ethics professor. I wonder how many
could say to Jesus, “I come to Mass every week,”
“I read the Bible each night,” “I come even
on retreat,” to whom Jesus might say, “But you
have never been my disciple, because you don’t put what
I ask you into practice.” The word “student”
comes from the Latin word for ZEAL, “studere,”
and to be a student likewise means to be zealous, to be on
fire, for what Jesus teaches. Today’s challenging words
from Jesus allow us a good indication of whether we’re
disciples “in spirit and in truth” or only in
name. Do we put what He asks us to do into practice with zeal,
preferring Him to everyone and everything else, picking up
our crosses each day, and using everything He has given us
for His purposes?
Mary was a true
disciple. She said “fiat” to God even though it
might mean her death (because she would have conceived a child
outside of wedlock and therefore could have been stoned under
the Mosaic law), even though it might mean the breakup of
her marriage to Joseph (if God hadn’t intervened with
him in a dream). She picked up her cross each day and followed
her Son all the way to Calvary. Her heart was pierced so many
times on account of her son, but by those piercings her heart
was even more united. And she was poor and detached from material
possessions—so poor that she gave birth in an animal
cave and laid Jesus in a manger; so poor that she and Joseph
couldn’t even afford a lamb for Jesus’ presentation,
but had to use two turtle doves—and found in God her
sole treasure.
The apostles likewise
were true disciples. They were ordinary people just like us,
but they were ones who said yes to God and tried to remain
faithful, even after their falls. After Peter had betrayed
the Lord three times to keep himself warm by a fire, Jesus,
after His resurrection, gave Peter a chance for a new beginning.
To symbolize that new beginning, He called Him by His original
name, “Simon, son of Jonah, do you love me more than
these?” (Jn. 21:15) We don’t know whether the
“these” were fish, or the other disciples, or
something else, but Jesus’ question was, essentially,
“Simon Peter, do you love me more than anything else?”
Peter said truly that he did.
The apostles picked
up their crosses and followed the Lord, all but one of them
dying by crucifixion, accounting themselves worthy to bear
suffering “on account of [Jesus’] name”
(Acts 5:41). And they were detached from the material world,
poor in spirit, finding their treasure in God. They traveled
with “no gold, or silver, or copper in [their] belts,
no bag for [their] journey, or two tunics, or sandals, or
a staff” (Mt. 10:8). So poor were they that Peter could
say in truth, when a man asked them for alms on the steps
of the temple, “I have no silver or gold, but what I
have I give you; in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth,
stand up and walk” (Acts 3:6).
Finally, Blessed
Mother Teresa, who we have heard much about lately, showed
us during our own lifetimes how to live by these principles.
The spirit of the Missionaries of Charity she was called by
God to found, and by which she lived, featured “total
surrender, loving trust and cheerfulness, according to the
example shown by Jesus and Mary in the Gospel.” She
loved Jesus above everything and entrusted herself totally
over to God in joyful love. She took on Christ’s Cross
to the fullest extent and realized that the Cross is not so
much a symbol of pain, but rather of the love that makes even
the pain of crucifixion bearable. She lived as a “missionary
of charity,” a missionary of that type of love which
is shown only through, with, and on the Cross with Jesus.
And the detachment of Mother Teresa and her MCs is legendary.
I remember well the story of Sr. Ajay, the superior of the
Missionaries’ convent in New Bedford where I go to celebrate
Mass and preach some conferences. She was just recently transferred.
My bishop asked her, “Are you ready to go?” and
she replied, “I’m all packed,” humbly concealing
the fact that the only possessions she has to her name is
a little toiletries kit and a second sari (habit) that she
washes as she wears the other.
God calls us to
a similar discipleship of putting Him first, living sacrificially
out of love, and putting everything we have at God’s
service in our ordinary life. But to do this well, we have
to have a plan. This is what Jesus was describing by the two
images of the man building a tower and a king going into battle.
Unless we “first sit down and estimate the cost, to
see whether [we have] enough to complete it” or “first
sit down and consider whether he is able with ten thousand
to oppose the one who comes against him with twenty thousand,”
we will fail in the endeavor. In the face of the greatest
project God has ever given us—being His faithful disciple
all the way into eternal life—we have first to sit down
to plan how to finish the project of fulfilling the criteria
He gives us today. Anything less is foolish.
Four
Resolutions
I’d like
to propose four resolutions for you to consider, to help you
continue to “live Mary’s mystery in Christ,”
which is the mystery of a discipleship according to the criteria
Jesus described in the Gospel:
1)
Prayer—The best way for you to grow in love
of God above all other loves is to make the time for Him every
day in prayer. I’m always amazed how many people tell
me that they don’t have time to pray. We don’t
have time not to pray! The average American watched six hours
of television a day. We spend more than seven hours in bed.
We generally eat at least three times a day. Most of us spend
a good deal of time on the telephone and on the computer daily.
Surely we can find a half-hour for the Lord. The form of prayer
can vary. We can make the commitment to spend time with Him
in the Blessed Sacrament. We can contemplate His face with
the help of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Rosary. The particular
form the resolution takes does not so much matter, as the
fact that we will make the time for Him each day, because
in any of the ways approved by the Church, Jesus can and will
nourish us. Prayer is also the place where we receive God’s
help to carry our daily Crosses as well as confer with Him
about how best to use the various resources He has placed
at our disposal.
2)
Daily Mass—At daily Mass, we come to listen
to Jesus speak to us in Sacred Scripture and to have Him feed
us with His Body and Blood, to strengthen us to face the various
struggles we will encounter in our daily discipleship. To
attend daily Mass would clearly require sacrifices for many
people, perhaps getting up early, fighting traffic, pushing
off some appointments to later in the day, but wouldn’t
these sacrifices be worth it, if in exchange you were to receive
God? This is another concrete way in which you can make sure
God is your chief love. You can unite yourself to His Cross
in the Mass, putting yourself on the paten. This is the best
way to make sure we’re not just spending our days serving
mammon in our work, but serving God first and foremost.
3)
Regular Confession—In following Jesus’
footsteps, we will occasionally fall. This great sacrament
is where Jesus tends our wounds, forgives us our sins, and
strengthens us with His own power to begin again. He instituted
this sacrament on the night He rose from the dead (cf. Jn.
20:18-22), because He knew each of us would need it. The great
saints have said that if we really want to become a saint—which
must be the goal of every disciple, for Jesus does not want
us to be mediocre—then we should go to Jesus in this
sacrament at least once a month. Confession helps us to recognize
whether we’ve been loving God with all our mind, heart,
soul, and strength, especially on the Cross. It forces us
to examine anything to which we’ve been attached besides
God. And we receive God’s help to recommence.
4)
Spirit of Sacrifice—As Jesus clearly attests
in today’s Gospel, his disciple will “love others
as he has loved us,” giving up His own life for the
sake of others. While Jesus does not call all of His disciples
to martyrdom, He does call each of us to be great in serving
the rest out of love. The greatest way to grow in true, Christ-like
love, is to “deny ourselves” for the sake of others
(cf. Mt. 16:24). This spirit of sacrifice helps us to overcome
our own egos, our own comfort zones, our own possessions,
and helps us to become much more like Christ. It helps us
in our whole lives to “make up for what is lacking in
Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that
is, the church” (Col. 1:24).
Our resolutions
will be what allow the seeds God has planted in us to grow.
Our resolutions will determine whether we’re just fans
of Jesus or true disciples, who are constantly in the search
of learning and growing in imitation of Christ. May Mary intercede
for us that we may have her type of faithful receptivity,
and so that, through concrete resolutions, the good seeds
planted in us may have the chance to grow. Jesus, who calls
us to be His disciples, will give us all the help He knows
we need to be good ones. May we say yes to Him like Mary did
in Nazareth, like she did at the foot of the Cross, so that
we might have the chance to say “Amen!” to Him
forever in heaven.
Father
Roger J. Landry is pastor
of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in New Bedford, MA and Executive
Editor of The Anchor, the weekly newspaper of the
Diocese of Fall River. An archive of his homilies and articles
is found at catholicpreaching.com.
This
is adapted from one of Fr. Landry’s recent homilies.
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