|
|
 |
|
Liturgical day
: Monday 4th in Ordinary Time |

Today's Gospel (Mk 5:1-20): Jesus and his disciples arrived on the other
side of the lake in the region of the Gerasenes. No sooner did Jesus leave the
boat than He was met by a man with evil spirits who had come from the tombs. He
lived among the tombs and no one could restrain him, even with a chain. He had
often been bound with fetters and chains but he would pull the chains apart and
smash the fetters, and no one had the strength to control him. Night and day he
stayed among the tombs on the hillsides, and was continually screaming and
beating himself with stones. When he saw Jesus from afar, he ran and fell at
his feet and cried with a loud voice, «What do you want with me, Jesus, son of
the Most High God? For God's sake I beg you, do not torment me». He said this
because Jesus had commanded, «Come out of the man, evil spirit». And when Jesus
asked him, «What is your name?», he replied, «Legion is my name, for we are many».
And all of them kept begging Jesus not to send them out of that region.
Now, a great
herd of pigs was feeding on the hillside, and the evil spirits begged him,
«Send us to the pigs and let us go into them». So Jesus let them go. The evil
spirits came out of the man and went into the pigs, and immediately the herd
rushed down the cliff and all were drowned in the lake. The herdsmen fled and
reported this in the town and in the countryside, so all the people came to see
what had happened. They came to Jesus and saw the man freed of the evil spirits
sitting there, clothed and in his right mind, the same man who had been
possessed by the legion. They were afraid. And when those who had seen it told
what had happened to the man and to the pigs, the people begged Jesus to leave
their neighborhood.
When Jesus
was getting into the boat, the man who had been possessed begged to stay with
him. Jesus would not let him and said, «Go home to your people and tell them
how much the Lord has done for you and how He has had mercy on you». So he went
throughout the country of Decapolis telling everyone how much Jesus had done
for him. And all the people were astonished.
|
|
Commentary: Fr. Ramon Octavi Sánchez i Valero
(Viladecans-Barcelona, Catalonia)
«Come out of the man, evil spirit»
Today, we find a
fragment of the Gospel that might induce someone to smile. Imagining a herd of
some two thousand pigs rushing down a cliff and into a lake, is a sort of funny
image. But the truth is that those herdsmen did not find any fun in what had
happened; they were very angry and begged Jesus to leave their neighborhood
immediately.
While the herdsmen's attitude may seem logical, it is
actually quite admonishing: for they would have undoubtedly preferred to save
their pigs rather than have that demonized man delivered from his evil spirits.
That is, first the material goods, which bring us money and ease, instead of a
dignified life for a man who does not belong "to our class". Because the man
possessed by the evil spirit was nothing but a person that «night and day
stayed among the tombs on the hillsides, and was continually screaming and
beating himself with stones» (Mk 5:5).
Quite often we run the risk to cling to what we own and
infuriate when we lose whatever material possessions we may have. Thus, we have
the farmer despairing when he loses his crop, even if fully insured or the
stock market investor who angers if his shares go down. On the other hand, few
are those who actually anguish when they see millions of human beings, many of
which may live next to us, living in extreme poverty or dying of hunger.
Jesus always placed persons before anything else, even
before the law and the powerful people of his time. But, just too often, we
only think of us and of what we believe may bring us some happiness, despite
the fact that selfishness never has brought any happiness to anyone. As the
Brazilian Bishop Dom Helder Cámara would say: «Selfishness is the deepest root
of all unhappiness. Your own and that of the whole world».
|
|