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"God’s Reign: Everyone is Invited,
But There are Standards" But let’s go back to the 60’s and 70’s. People doing
research say that you cannot have gone through those decades without having your
psyche and your soul deeply influenced. Especially in the 60’s, everything
shifted, everything moved: politics, business, family life, our approach to
gender issues, and religion and spirituality. I think we are still feeling the
implications of these shifts as we approach a new century. Some of the shifts of the 60’s and 70’s were healthy.
Technology advanced. We became more oriented toward human experience. The
behavioral sciences, psychology and sociology, significantly broadened and
deepened. But also in the 60’s and 70’s, some potentially dangerous trends
began to emerge. Baby boomers, and their children, baby busters, grew up in a
period of relativism, subjectivism, and anti-institutionalism that has led to
questionable approaches to relationships, human sexuality, questions of human
life, and ethics in general. In the gospels, Jesus is frequently portrayed as being at
odds with organized religion, with the religious institutions of his culture,
especially the practices of the Scribes and the Pharisees. Jesus calls people to
a reality that seems to transcend religion. He calls them to the Kingdom of God,
God’s Reign. When people of the 60’s and 70’s hear Jesus in conflict with
organized religion, I think it often appeases our anti-institutional tendencies
and appetites. Those of us who grew up in the 60’s can be anti- "anything
organized." But I think we need to beware of interpreting Jesus’ view of
the Kingdom of God, for Jesus’ view of the Kingdom of God is far from being
laissez-faire, laid back, or lacking in convictions or imperatives. In chapter
22 of Matthew’s gospel, Jesus paints a picture of the Reign of God as a
wedding banquet to which everyone is invited. The invitation to the way
of life that Jesus calls "The Kingdom" is a universal call, a
universal invitation. No one religion has an inside track to God’s Reign. But
in the same passage, someone invited to the banquet is thrown out of the
banquet, excluded from God’s Reign, for not wearing a wedding garment. Now, at
first hearing or reading this seems quite harsh and unfair on the part of the
King, who is God, who invites any and all to the banquet. But the message that
Jesus seems to be making is this: while God might not be too interested in
human-made regulations and restrictions of organized religion, and while all are
invited to this greater reality of God’s Reign—God’s Reign does have
specific standards and values that those attending the banquet or members of the
Kingdom must adhere to. The Kingdom of God as preached by Jesus is not an experience
of "anything goes." The attitudes, values, and behaviors of the
Kingdom seem to cluster around these realities: radical, passionate
God-centeredness; love of others as brothers and sisters; a strong sense of
mercy, compassion, justice, and community; and love of and concern for the
society, the world around us, and all of creation. The garment that the one
unfortunate man did not have represents the attitudes, values, and behaviors of
the Kingdom which we must "put on" if we are to follow Jesus with
integrity. The Kingdom: everyone is invited; but it is not about doing your own
thing. Let us focus, for a minute on three disciplines that Jesus calls people
of the Kingdom to: love, unity, and, as I mentioned before, concern for society
and the world around us. I think love is one of those realities that became
blurred and confused during the 60’s and 70’s, and some of the confusion
extends to our own day. For some people, love is sexual experiences. Others
confuse love with manipulation and control of others. Others call various
expressions of power over others love. The kind of love that Jesus calls
people to is on a continuum, extending from love toward our primary
relationships, to love of, and concern for, enemies, strangers, and the victims
of social injustice. Can you see this kind of loving is quite different from
sexual conquests, controlling others, power over others. What might that love look like among and between people we
consider to be our primary relationships? I mention some of the following
characteristics of love, and I’d like to openly confess that I often fail in
many of them. I think love is presence. Presence is much more than
physically being around. It is an emotional discipline; being with and attending
to another person. It is positively paying attention to another person. Presence
is subtle; it requires effort. You know, often we exit from each other in our
relationships. We can exit through work, hobbies, sports, TV, reading. We can
even use involvement at Church to exit a relationship. Is there anyone that you
are exiting? Is there anyone that you’re not being present to? Why? What is
going on in that relationship? Love is communication. Communication is much more than
passing on information to someone —though that is part of it. Love is sharing
thoughts and feelings, one’s interior world with another person. You know,
often I experience people at the end of their relationships, angrily criticizing
each other for not communicating. Often in these situations, responsibility for
not communicating lies on both ends of the relationship. To communicate we must
develop skills in reading, hearing another person’s inner world. But a person
must develop also a congruency with one’s own inner world to communicate that
to another. How and where are we with these dual skills of really hearing
another, and also sharing ourselves with another? Love is a decision. More than the 60’s /70’s emphasis on
feelings, true love is a commitment. We love when we feel like it and when we
don’t feel like it. Love is truly hard work. True love must rest on the solid
foundation of decision or commitment, for our feelings shift. And I believe love is encouragement and support. In love, we
let another person know what is good, what’s beautiful, what’s wonderful
about him or her. We help reveal to the person how they have been gifted by God. But in some circumstances, love is challenge. It takes work
to stand against a person that we love, sometimes, calling that person to
alternate ways of seeing or doing life. Sometimes we need to engage in tough
love. Love. Love is self sacrifice. I believe love is being willing
to hang on a cross for someone else, to lay down one’s life, as Jesus speaks
of it in John 15. But we need to watch it. Self sacrifice can become unhealthy
if we do not practice another dimension of love; that is, healthy self-care,
self-love, self-esteem. You know, often the most requested seminars or talks
that I give center around the management of stress and anxiety. People tell me
they know how to work, they know how to make money, but they don’t know how to
positively care for themselves. A survivor of cancer told me recently,
"Since my battle with cancer, I deliberately try to care for my mind and my
body." We all need to do that. We all need to do that, not waiting for
disease or catastrophe to strike. Love of self and love of others becomes more possible, I
believe, if those efforts are grounded in a profound, pervasive conviction, a
conviction that an ultimate someone, God, loves us first and loves us
unconditionally. We are freed to love self and others when we live with the
assurance, as Paul spoke of it, that God is working all things for our benefit. And, I believe love is forever. The decision or commitment of
love is eternal. If we experience love as terminating, as not being forever, I
believe it’s because people really did not know each other, and there was
perhaps a pathology, an immaturity, an incapacity there that was not known
about. Or sometimes relationships fall victim to the culture of narcissism
around us. In such situations a person has served his or her usefulness to
another person and that person moves on to another utilitarian relationship. Love is presence, communication, a decision, encouragement,
challenge, self sacrifice, self esteem, grounded in divine love. Love is
forever. And, as I said earlier, love is on a continuum, extending from our
primary relationships to unconditional positive regard for enemies, for
strangers, and for those who suffer from social injustice. Love God, others, and yourself. Jesus teaches in Matthew 22
that these commandments summarize, synthesize all religious law and all
religious tradition. Jesus was not being original in highlighting these three
poles of love. Deuteronomy 6:5 had called the Old Testament Jews to love God
above all. Leviticus 19:18 had called them to love neighbor as much as the self.
Jesus’ unique contribution and revelation is that he connects these three
touchstones of love, seemingly making them equal to each other, and
interconnected. In Jesus’ perspective, we cannot do one of these touchstones
well without simultaneously doing the others. Also, love of God seems to be
experienced through love of self and love of neighbor. I think one of the dimensions of love that cries out for our
attention and effort is unity among ourselves as Christians. Joseph Cardinal
Bernardin called Catholics to such unity in his Common Ground project, which
still is calling Catholics beyond bashing each other with our political ideology
or expression of Faith, to greater listening to and respect for each other, as
we seek the common ground that truly unites us—which is Faith. Faith is a
life-giving relationship with the living God. Faith is a shared core story, held
by members of a community. Faith is a shared memory, held in community. Faith is
a shared vision with a consciousness that it is an alternative to the dominant
culture’s vision around us. Faith is a holistic, integral way of life. When the apostles want to dismiss the Canaanite woman seeking
healing for her daughter in Matthew 15, because she is different from them in
convictions and lifestyle, Jesus stops for the woman and grants her request.
With this "foreigner", if you will, Jesus intuits there is common
ground. There’s faith. "Woman, great is your faith", Jesus says. Not
just Catholics, all Christians, and all people of faith, need to seek common
ground—unity with each other. Why, the scriptures seem to suggest that unity
is the very dream of God for us. Communion seems to be God’s intention for us
in the creation account. Communion, unity is the dream preached by Jesus in his
teachings on the Kingdom. What does it profit any of us to practice a
mean-spirited, judgmental, elitist religion that is empty of love, mercy,
compassion, and understanding? Spirituality is shallow and our successes are
hollow if we do not practice love and unity with our fellow human beings. Finally, I again turn to Cardinal Bernardin for wisdom regarding a last
dimension of Kingdom living: care for the society and the world around us.
Looking again at Matthew 22: Jesus teaches us to give to Caesar what is Caesar’s—give
to the emperor what’s the emperor’s—and give to God what is God’s. This
kingdom teaching of Jesus must not be misconstrued as calling us to a separation
of spirituality and our interaction with society. In an address at Georgetown,
Cardinal Bernardin highlighted three ways in which Christians and other
believers positively influence society. We who believe offer vision to society
and engage society in
dialogue about vision for life. For example, the Catholic Church’s emphasis on
the consistent ethic of life. Secondly, we bring service and ministry to the
world around us through our educational, health, and outreach services; and we
do this without checking out peoples’ religious affiliations. And, thirdly,
those who live the values of their faith, for example, the values of the Kingdom
of God, we ought to be good citizens who enrich the society that we live in. The faith, hope and love of the Reign of God can’t be
isolated from daily life or political life. They bubble over. They bubble over
and interact with society. As Stephen Carter maintains in The Culture of
Disbelief, the founders of this country were not trying to separate religion
from influencing daily life. Spirituality and religion of necessity do
influence how we interact with the world. No, the founders wanted to protect
religion from being meddled with by outside influences like government. This is
what they meant when they talked about the separation of Church and State. In a
recent "U.S. News and World Report," Richard Freeman of Harvard
University and others speak of the "faith factor" as perhaps holding
the key to healing the social ills of America and to improve the quality of
citizenship in America. So, to sum up, God’s Reign: everyone is invited. But the
standards are difficult to live by. They include the disciplines of love with
people close to us, love of all people as brothers and sisters, a discipline of
unity and communion, and a care for and responsibility toward the society and
the world around us. Indeed, all are invited to the banquet, but we need to
"put on" that garment of love, mercy, unity and justice that God
demands for the banquet. Interview with Patrick Brennan
Lydia Talbot: Fr. Brennan, how was that ethic of love you talk about first revealed to you? Patrick Brennan: I think, as for most people, through my family, through my interactions, especially with my parents. My parents—my dad is deceased; my mom is still living, thank God—were very self-sacrificial, simple people, and I saw them hanging on the cross for their kids and for each other over and over again. Talbot: You used that image: love is being willing to hang on the cross for someone else. You also use the word congruency. That’s a tough thing to find in one’s life, isn’t it? Brennan: It’s very hard for us in this stress-filled society. Talbot: How do you do it? Brennan: By praying and I need quiet time everyday. And, you know, I’m an old introvert. I find if I do not give a block of time for myself to get congruent with myself, what’s really going on with me, it’s then that I have anxiety problems and stress problems and things like that. Talbot: Thanks for that message. That encourages us to think more about that kind of balance. Thanks so much, Patrick Brennan. Wonderful to have you here! Brennan: Good to be here,
Lydia. Thank you. |
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