The Artists Hand V, Henry Moore, 1979 - Tate/Henry Moore Foundation |
Back at home, there is no such
protection. Outside, the crowd was so dense that the disciples couldn’t get out
to get food.
Jesus’ friends seem worried.
They want to get hold of him. They think he has gone mad. “He is beside
himself” - they say.
Then the scribes arrive from
Jerusalem. They also want to get hold of Jesus. To bring him down a peg or two.
You aren’t doing God’s work, they say. Only someone in league with the Devil -
with Beelzebub - can drive out demons like that.
Finally, Jesus’ mother and
brothers arrive on the scene, calling out and sending messengers through the
gathered crowd, trying to get hold of him.
Everyone wants to get hold of
Jesus. And each of them, in their own different way, thinks they are acting
with the best of intentions.
But, using a parable Jesus
shows that they are in fact doing the opposite.
First, he explains how God’s
kingdom - what St Paul calls our eternal home - is a place of unity and not
division, and that our earthly house - everything around us now - was once the
same. But it became occupied by a Strong Man. A man who must be bound in order
for his power to be subdued.
Jesus came and did just that.
He released us from the captivity of that power. A power so strong we often
fail to see it at work in our lives. That desire to get hold of things. To get
hold of other people. The desire to invade. To divide and conquer. That desire
for control.
Jesus has freed us from that
power.
Then, he calls us to embrace
that freedom - that liberating gift of love - that Spirit - which forgives our
sins for whatever blasphemies we utter. But Jesus warns us never to challenge - to blaspheme - against
that Spirit. Never to seek to control or second-guess its work - in ourselves
or others.
The stories filling the pages
of our history books and newspapers show that accepting each other’s God-given
freedom is perhaps the most difficult lesson for us to learn.
But through the death and
resurrection of Jesus we have become part of another story.
By freeing us from the desire
to hold on to everything else, our hands are open. Open to Christ and, through
him, open to receive each other as we truly are – people made in his image.
Finally, Jesus teaches us to
see that when we approach each other through him, we will discover a new form
of unity. A unity that transcends friendship that transcends family ties.
“For whosoever shall do the
will of God, the same is my brother, and my sister, and mother.”
Just as in our scriptures, the
world today seems full of people wanting to get hold of something or someone. To hold on to power. To hold on to status. To hold onto control.
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