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Liturgical day
: Sunday 24th (B) in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Mk 8:27-35): Jesus set out with his disciples for
the villages around Caesarea Philippi; and on the way He asked them,
«Who do people say I am?». And they told him, «Some
say you are John the Baptist; others say you are Elijah or one of the
prophets». Then Jesus asked them, «But you, who do you
say I am?». Peter answered, «You are the Messiah».
And He ordered them not to tell anyone about him.
Jesus
then began to teach them that the Son of Man had to suffer many
things and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests and the
teachers of the Law. He would be killed and after three days rise
again. Jesus said all this quite openly, so that Peter took him aside
and began to protest strongly. But Jesus turning around, and looking
at his disciples, rebuked Peter saying, «Get behind me Satan!
You are thinking not as God does, but as people do».
Then
Jesus called the people and his disciples and said, «If you
want to follow me, deny yourself, take up your cross and follow me.
For if you choose to save your life, you will lose it; and if you
lose your life for my sake and for the sake of the Gospel, you will
save it».
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Commentary: Fr. Antoni Carol i Hostench (Sant Cugat del Vallès-Barcelona,
Catalonia)
«If
you want to follow me (…) take up your cross and follow me»
Today
we find ourselves confronted with situations similar to those
described in this evangelical passage. If, right now, God would ask
us «But you, who do you say I am?» (Mk 8:27), we
should have to warn him He could receive all kind of replies, some
even rather quaint. It would suffice to have a look at what is going
on in today's communication revolution. Except that… more than
twenty centuries of “time of the Church” have already
gone by. After so many years, we complain and —along with St.
Faustine— we grumble before Jesus: «Why is it so small
the number of those who know you?».
On
occasion of that confession of faith made by Simon Peter, Jesus,
«ordered them not to tell anyone about Him» (Mk
8:30). His messianic claims to be the Son of God were to be
transmitted to the Jewish people with a progressive pedagogy. Later
on, there would come the culminating moment when Jesus Christ would
declare —once and for all— that He was the Messiah: «You
say that I am» (Lk 22:70). Ever since, we have no more
excuses not to declare him or recognize him as the Son of God who
came to this world to save us. Even more so: all of us who have been
baptized into Christ have this “priestly” joyous duty «to
go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature»
(Mk 16:15). This call to preach the Good News is therefore
more urgent if we bear in mind that we keep on hearing all kind of
wrong, and even blasphemous, opinions about him.
But
the announcement of his Messianism and the advent of his Kingdom
occurs through the Cross. Effectively, Jesus Christ «began to
teach them that the Son of Man must suffer greatly» (Mk
8:31), and the Catechism reminds us that «the Church
progresses on her pilgrimage amidst this world's persecutions and
God's consolations» (n. 769). Therefore, this is the path to
follow Christ and to make him known to all peoples: «If you
want to follow me (…) take up your cross and follow me»
(Mk 8:34).
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