Dear Friends,
In today’s Gospel, Jesus casts fire and brings division, not
by default or by accident but by design.
“I have
come to cast fire on the earth,” he says, “and I can’t wait until it’s
kindled.”
What does the fire of Christ do to the tangle of life? What
is it doing, here and now, in your life and mine? How is life more richly livable
because of the fire Christ continues to kindle on earth?
One way to get at the meaning behind Christ’s words is to
think for a few moments about the nature of fire: what it does and what it
requires.
We know that fire warms the cold. It destroys, illuminates,
purifies and divides that which burns from that which does not.Last year, the
forest and mountains of California burned ferociously. People who know about
these things assure us that such fires renew the forest. But it doesn’t mean
that people who live in the burned out areas don’t suffer life-altering loss.
Words also create fire within us. If I say to you “white
supremacists” or “racism”, I have said words of fire and division. Anger. Shouting. Rejection and
ejection. Disowning. These are
part of the cost of the divisions in our
country today. Within our very
families we find division over these words. Divsions in our families burn over
moral issues and movements as well.
Our divisions come from many sources: selfrighteousness,
convction or charged emotions. Sometimes they come from human error or
clumsiness. Somethimes they come from taking a deliberate stand on the other side.
How often we treat others, particularly those close to us as
the crowds treated Jeremiah. His is a
universal story. Many a Jeremiah are thrown into the pit of mud in our own
times, in the hope that such an inconvenient witness will disappear. We stuff
them down a well so that we won’t have to listen to them or be challenged by
them. Do we try to create a world of harmony or do
we content ourselves with life in our own small worlds, ignoring the cries from
the well.
At times, we, to, are stuffed down a well: misunderstood,
unaccepted , ignored. If we have ever been there, and have gotten out through
the help of others, I hope we are charged up to help others down under.
It is precisely the fire of Jesus hat can illuminate these
questions for us. He challenges our values, culled from our culture, and
presents us with alternatives that may put us at odds with our family or
society. Christ insists that redemption involves conflict and change, not just
charity to victims. We are called to challenge oppressive structures.
Our attentive God will be as a spark for us, and if that
spark catches, we’ll find ourselves burning with new motivations, a clearing
vision, deepening hope and great compassion. Are we
ready to be ignited?
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