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Exegesis
Texts of the Readings
July 9,
2006
Fourteenth
Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)
Dr.
Terrance Callan
Ezek 2:2-5
X
2 Cor 12:7-10 X
Mark 6:1-6
Spontaneously we do everything we can
to avoid failure and rejection. However, Christian faith challenges us to
accept these inevitable experiences and see them as part of God’s presence
in our lives.
The reading from the gospel of Mark narrates what happened when
Jesus visited his own country. When he taught in the synagogue there, the
people did not accept him because they knew him and his family. It was hard
to believe that someone they had known all his life could be anything
special. And because of their lack of faith Jesus “was not able to perform
any mighty deed there.” Jesus interpreted their rejection of him as the
response a prophet always receives in his own country: “A prophet is not
without honor except in his native place....” Outside of his own country
Jesus met with greater acceptance, but he also experienced rejection there.
The rejection of Jesus in his own country foreshadows the final rejection
that led to his crucifixion.
The reading from the book of the prophet Ezekiel is part of the
story of Ezekiel’s call to be a prophet. God sent Ezekiel as a prophet to
the people of Israel, calling them “a rebellious house.” Though some of
them will heed his message, others will resist it. Thus Ezekiel, like
Jesus, exemplifies the rejection that all prophets experience.
The reading from St. Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians
explains how it makes sense that prophets and other messengers of God
encounter rejection. Paul, an apostle rather than a prophet, speaks of the
difficulties of his own vocation. He says that he was given a “thorn in the
flesh” to keep him from becoming conceited. Paul seems to suppose that if
those who act in the name of God experienced only success, they might make
the mistake of attributing the success to themselves rather than to God.
Failure helps them not to think too highly of themselves.
However, Paul’s explanation of the place of failure in the
ministry of the prophet and apostle goes even deeper. Not only does failure
help the prophet or apostle to avoid conceit; in a mysterious way what we
consider failure is essential to the accomplishment of God’s purposes. Paul
says that he asked the Lord three times to free him from the thorn in the
flesh. In reply the Lord said to Paul: “My grace is sufficient for you,
for power is made perfect in weakness.” Because of this Paul says that he
is “content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and
constraints, for the sake of Christ; for when I am weak, then I am strong.”
Paul does not explain, and perhaps could not explain, exactly
how God’s power and success are found within our failure and weakness. But
he is undoubtedly thinking of the death and resurrection of Jesus as
providing the key to God’s way of doing things. Somehow God’s salvation of
the world was accomplished by what seems to us to have been the humiliation
and defeat that Jesus suffered on the cross. For Paul being a Christian
means incorporation into the body of Christ. The follower of Jesus is
caught up into the same divine action we see in Jesus.
Terrance Callan
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