Today,
following the example of the most modern TV producer, we are given to
see Jesus conjuring images of unstoppable fire and worms into a place
we have to avoid by all means: into hell, «where the worms that
eat them never die, and the fire never goes out» (Mk
9:48). It is a vivid description of the state a person may attain
when his/her life has not carried him/her where he/she wanted to go.
It could be compared to the moment when, while driving our car, we
take the wrong road by thinking it is the right one, and we end up in
an unknown place, not knowing where we are and where we did not
certainly want to go. We have to avoid it, no matter how, even if we
have to get rid of some apparently unalienable things: without hands
(cf. Mk 9,43), without feet (cf. Mk 9,45), without eyes
(cf. Mk 9,47). We have to have the strong desire to enter into
the Kingdom of God even if we have to go without an essential part of
ourselves.
It is possible that
this Gospel may incite us to mull over something we may have, very
dear to us, but that prevents us from seeing God, —or even
worse— that pushes us away from God.
The
same Jesus leads us to look for the sin responsible for all our
failings (hands, feet and eyes). Jesus speaks about anyone that could
cause one of these little ones who believe in Him to stumble and sin
(cf. Mk 9:42). “To cause someone to sin” is to
turn someone away from God. We, therefore, appraise in every person
his nearness to Jesus, the faith he may have.
Jesus
teaches us we do not have to belong to the Twelve or to be one of his
most intimate disciples to be able to stay beside Him: «For
whoever is not against us is for us» (Mk 9:40). However,
some might imply our salvation is a very simple thing. But it is not.
Our salvation is an accomplished fact only if we are in Christ. It is
a lesson of today's Gospel: many are those who, because of their
deeds, are closer to the Kingdom of God than we may think. As St.
Therese of Lisieux admitted: «The Lord cannot reward me for my
deeds (…) Thus, I hope He will reward me for His».