The following reflection on the readings of the day for September 20th is featured in the September 2023 issue of Give Us This Day from Liturgical Press
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My eight-year-old nephew has taken to creating imaginative
games. There are whimsical dance battles, intricate webs of hide-and-seek, and
fanciful games in which everyone must do what they’re told. Because he’s often
making up the rules of these games as we go, there is little room, in my
nephew’s mind, for improvisation on the part of participants. Try doing
something different and (more than likely) the game is over.
The same, it would seem, is true of those Jesus encounters
in today’s Gospel. In their eyes, Jesus didn’t play by the rules. Like John the
Baptist, Jesus challenged assumptions and pushed boundaries. What they had
imagined the Messiah to be, Jesus wasn’t. He wept in sorrow and rejoiced with
outcasts. He was fully human and utterly divine, a mystery beyond their—and
our—wildest dreams.
This is the mystery of devotion Paul writes about in his
letter to Timothy. This mystery is not some game we master but someone we come
to know: Jesus the Christ. “Manifested in the flesh, vindicated in the spirit,”
Jesus invites us into mystery, to grow in relationship with the unknowable and
to bend our rules toward mercy. Our devotion demands that we reimagine what we
think possible, embracing the unexpected and adopting the wisdom of Christ.
This wisdom calls us into union with all—the rule makers and the rule breakers,
those who suffer under our assumptions and those in whom we find the kinship of
Christ—so that together we might become the Church of the living God that
Christ calls us to be.
[CREDIT] Sr. Colleen Gibson, SSJ, from the September 2023 issue of Give Us This Day, www.giveusthisday.org (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2023). Used with permission.