Having returned last week to “Ordinary Time” and to St. Matthew’s Gospel as the source of our Sunday Mass readings, we find Jesus trying to prepare his disciples for the missions that they themselves will be called to assume. Specifically in the Gospel for this Sunday, Jesus prepares them for the rejection and hostility they can expect if they embrace the mission he gives them. In doing so, he addresses their anxieties and fears about human opposition on the part of those who already have rejected Jesus’ message with great hostility.
The Twelve were understandably anxious about being sent out to preach on their own.
In response, Jesus commands two simple things: fear no one, and preach boldly. Of course, these are familiar themes throughout early Christian literature. Bold speakers may inspire fascination, but in an explosive environment like that of Roman-occupied Palestine, such fearless speech must have struck the Twelve as more imprudent than inspiring! They, like we, however, could draw inspiration from Jeremiah the prophet, whose story we also hear in the Sunday readings. His preaching aroused hostility, so much so that at one point he was imprisoned, tortured and left to die in a muddy well; he was delivered each time. He never stopped preaching, and history proved his words to be correct.
Matthew was writing for Christians of every age. The fearless, risky speech of Jeremiah and Jesus is both an example and a command to Christians in all times and places. Jesus trusted in his heavenly Father and had confidence in the truth of his own message. His love was greater than the world’s hate. We need to trust the same message. Love conquers all. You and I preach it less in words than in deeds, recognizing that the “cost” of our witness is sometimes the same insofar as we encounter cynicism, defensiveness and misunderstanding, if not blatant hostility. And yet, whenever you and I make ordinary, daily choices of love in response to whatever circumstances and opportunities each day brings, no matter how seemingly small, we are acknowledging that Christ is alive and at work in the world. We are the disciples on whom God relies to continue the Son’s mission as history unfolds.
Fr. Frank Reale, S.J.
