Being Christian is not due to an ethical choice or grand idea, but the encounter with a person who gives life a new horizon and direction.
Seeds:
First Reading: Exodus 16:2-4, 12-15
Psalm: Psalm 77(78):3-4,23-25,54
Second Reading: Ephesians 4:17,20-24
Gospel: John 6:24-35
Sapling:
I was planning to spend the next few weeks reflecting on the beautiful discourse in John 6. But the second reading from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians hit me like an electric shock. I think we all need that kind of electrifying moment from time to time.
Paul puts us on notice right from the first line: “I want to urge you in the name of the Lord”.
Pause for a moment to let that sink in. Paul wants to urge us – you and me – in the name of God himself. This is a deeply serious thing for a person to say. Remember, Paul was a very well-read Pharisee, who knew his Old Testament back to front. He this line from Deuteronomy: “the prophet who presumes to speak a word in my name that I have not commanded him to speak, or who speaks in the name of other gods, that same prophet shall die.’” (Deuteuronomy 18:20, ESV).
Prophecy, in the biblical sense, is less about looking into the future, but more about speaking the words of God. Paul, then, lets us know that what he’s about to say carries the weight of a capital punishment under the Mosaic Law, if he isn’t in fact speaking in the name of the Lord.
Here’s the message Paul wanted to deliver: do not “go on living the aimless kind of life that pagans live.”
A person who becomes a Christian or who starts living the life of discipleship with intentionality should experience a change in their life. This is a constant teaching of Paul, as also of the whole New Testament, and I think it’s something that we all need to ponder today.
Does your life look different, as a follower of Christ, from the lives of everyone else around you?
Paul defines what that change is about: it’s about direction.
One of my favourite quotes from the late Pope Benedict XVI, which I come back to again and again, is at the beginning of his encyclical Deus Caritas Est: “Being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction.”
Pope Benedict understood what Paul is getting at here in Ephesians: Christ causes us to change direction, decisively.
In what way can we say that the lives of “pagans” (in Paul’s context he meant all those who weren’t Christian) are aimless? At the most basic level, it’s because without the hope of eternal life with God that Christ offers us in the gospel, what ultimately is there to aim for?
People go to work to make money to pay their mortgage, then go back to work to get more money to pay their mortgage, again and again. Until, eventually, we die, and that house gets sold to someone else.
Christian life is supposed to be different – it has a focus and a goal by having encountered the Jesus who beckons us to follow him where he has gone before.
Paul is very blunt with us: “you must give up your old way of life.” Not that we should think about it, or perhaps see it as a good idea in the future: we must do it now.
Is he telling us to give up our jobs? For some people, he might be – that’s how people end up as missionaries or enter monasteries or convents. We shouldn’t disparage that or presume that God doesn’t call people in that way anymore.
But for others, God isn’t calling on us to give up our old lives in that way. He is calling on all of us to consider the direction and the goal of our lives. It needs to be laser focused on Christ!
What if we don’t feel that, though? What if we find ourselves going through the motions; turning up at Mass out of habit and not feeling much of a connection to what’s going on, our minds drifting to the film we saw the night before or the emails we need to reply to.
Again, Paul seeks to wake us up, reminding us that there is a danger if we “failed to hear him [Christ] properly”.
Let’s not have that be true of us, rather let’s undergo the “spiritual revolution” Paul calls for. It begins in prayer and repentance (which means seeking that decisive new direction in our life). The Lord promised to reveal himself to those who earnestly seek his face. It might not be easy, or comfortable, but the rewards are well worth it.
Fruit: