Today,
when Easter is near, some unusual event has happened at the Temple.
Jesus has driven the merchants and their animals out of the Temple
court, has knocked over the tables of the money-changers and has
ordered the people selling doves «take all this away and stop
turning my Father's house into a marketplace!» (Jn
2:16). And while the oxen and the sheep were stampeding across the
esplanade, the disciples discovered a new aspect of Jesus’
soul: the zeal for his Father's House, the zeal for God's Temple.
The
Temple of God becoming a market place! what a piece of nonsense! They
probably started with a few animals, a shepherd trying to sell some
sheep, or an old woman who wanted to make a few coins by selling
doves,… and the ball kept growing and growing. Stop, cried the
Song of Songs' author: «Catch us the foxes, the little foxes
that damage the vineyards; for our vineyards are in bloom»
(Song 2:15). But here, nobody could care less! The Temple
esplanade was like a market on market day.
—I
am a temple of God, too. If I do not watch, these little foxes,
pride, sloth, gluttony, envy, avarice, forms of disguise selfishness
often adopts, will sneak in and damage everything. This is why the
Lord warns us: «What I say to you, I say to all: ‘Watch’!»
(Mk 13:37).
Watch!,
so that apathy does not invade our conscience: «Being incapable
of acknowledging guilt is the most dangerous form of spiritually
arrested development one can imagine, because this in particular
makes people incapable of improvement» (Benedict XVI).
To
keep vigil? —I try to every night. Did I molest someone?, are
my intentions straightforward?, am I willing to fulfill always and in
everything God's will?, have I assumed some practice that may
displease our Lord? But, late at night I am too tired and sleepy to
think…
—Jesus,
you know me well, you know quite well what each man's mind is like,
so make me realize my own faults, give me strength and a little bit
of that zeal of yours so that I can also drive out from the temple
all that might appear to separate me from you.