Faith-Jesus Christ-Authority

HOMILY SUNDAY 04 – B ORDINARY TIME

Sharing in the Power and Authority of Jesus

(Dt 18:15-20; Psalm 95; 1 Cor 7:17, 32-35; Mk 1:21-28)

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Are you familiar with the expression to “Walk the talk? Today’s readings invite us to live our faith and share in the power and authority of Jesus.

The great American lecturer, essayist and poet, Ralph Waldo Emerson, could have coined that phrase, to “Walk the talk.” He once wrote, “Only so much do I know as I have lived. Instantly we know whose words are loaded with life. I learn immediately from any speaker how much he has lived. One person speaks from within, or from experience, as a possessor of the fact; another speaks from without, as a spectator, or as acquainted with the facts on the evidence of a third person. It is no use to preach to me from without. I can do that myself.”

He could have been speaking about Jesus when describing the person who speaks from within. Jesus possessed a unique and extraordinary authority. That is evident in the gospel account for today, and throughout the scriptures.

At the time of Jesus, no scribe ever expressed his own opinion without first quoting his authorities. Jesus spoke from his own person, from within. The Greek word for authority is exousia. It derives from ex meaning “out of” and ousia, meaning “being.” Jesus, like no other person, spoke from within, from his own being.

Some human beings have an unaccountable spiritual authority. This gives them enormous moral authority. They have this authority, not by virtue of an office they hold, but by virtue of the kind of persons they are. This is the greatest and highest authority of all that has its roots in the authority of God himself.  Without it, the holder of an office is a mere functionary, a mere mouthpiece. Jesus possessed this kind of authority to a degree unequalled by anyone else. Every Christian, irrespective of whether or not he/she holds an office, can and should have some of this kind of authority – the kind that comes from being a person of transparent integrity.

Nelson Mandela was an example of that kind of authority and integrity. He was imprisoned unjustly in South Africa for twenty-five years because of his struggle against apartheid. Yet upon his release, he more than any other person spoke of the need for forgiveness and power-sharing with the very people who imprisoned him. When he speaks of forgiveness and reconciliation, people listened to what he has to say because he had lived it firsthand. He had that kind of moral authority that commands attention.

Speaking without that kind of authority is to run the risk of being phony and even destructive. I remember one speaker at a Marriage Encounter once who, after he had written his talk that mentioned daily dialogue with his wife, got a mining job that took him away from home, one week in and one week out. The problem surfaced at the next ME that he was part of because he had not revised his talk and ended up blatantly reading what was no longer true – a daily dialogue with his wife. The men in the crowd were especially disgruntled and the team had to work hard to do damage control just to keep some of them from leaving the weekend.

In the first reading today Moses, the great prophet himself, spoke of a great prophet who would come, to whom we must listen. That prophet is Jesus, whose authority comes from his relationship with the Father as Son of God.

According to the New Interpreter’s Bible, even the demons in Mark’s retelling prove to be more perceptive than the human audience. They acknowledge that Jesus’ coming marks the end of their own domination over human beings. The end of demonic power is a sign that the present evil age is coming to an end. The crowd sees Jesus as a powerful miracle worker, but they do not recognize that he is the Son of God, as do the demons. Satan’s power is being broken up because the Lord has come to redeem the people. Therefore, the exorcism indicates what it means for the kingdom of God to draw near.

The kingdom cannot be separated from the person of Jesus, who embodies God’s power. In her book, Preaching Mark, Bonnie Thurston notes that the use of the Greek word phimotheti, which our translation renders as “be silent” actually means “be muzzled.” It’s what one would do to a dangerous dog to stop both his bark and his bite. That’s what the word of God does to the unclean spirits. Jesus speaks with that kind of authority.

What should our response be to these readings? Certainly, we need to pray for strong faith in the identity of Jesus that far surpasses merely amazement. We also need to be attentive to the demons in our own lives. We need to be on healing journeys ourselves if we are to be credible witnesses to others and speak out of our own experience of healing. Lastly, we can do all we can to minister to others through teaching God’s word that contains within it an openness to the healing power of that Word.

The Eucharist is an act of faith. The unconditional love of the Holy One of God who shed his blood and died for us on the cross is made present for us through Word and Sacrament. That love reaches deep within the darkness of our lives to exorcise the evil that still clings to us, to heal us and make us authoritative witnesses of that love.

So, let us continue to joyfully praise this God who lives and speaks a liberating truth that sets us free. Let us live our faith and share in the power and authority of Jesus. Let us resolve to always walk the talk.

 

 

Updated: January 31, 2021 — 2:25 am

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