Homily for December 13th, 2013: Mathew 11th, 2013.
Jesus speaks
often of children in the gospels, usually in a positive sense In today’s gospel
Jesus speaks about a negative aspect of childhood. Grieved that too few of his
own people have responded either to his cousin, John the Baptist, or to
himself, Jesus compares them to children who reject every approach of those who
reach out to them in loving concern. ‘You complained that John was too strict
and ascetic,' Jesus says in effect. ‘Me you find too laid back and merciful.
What do you want?’ Jesus asks them.
Children can
be like that. I experienced it myself, in my own childhood. I might have been
ten years old, or even younger, with a sister eight, and a brother six. I
remember my father saying to another grownup, in a tone of resigned
frustration: “My children are contra-suggestive.” I no longer know what
occasioned this remark, but I can easily imagine it. Whatever my father
suggested, by way of a leisure activity – whether it was a walk, a drive in the
country, or a visit to a museum – we said: “Oh, no -- we don’t want to do
that.”
Most of us
carry over this childhood stubbornness into adult life. We’d like to determine
our own agenda, thank you. But of course we can’t. God set the agenda for us
before we were even born. “My yoke is easy”, Jesus says, “and my burden light”
(Mt. 11:30). Jesus’ yoke is easy, however, only if we accept it. Otherwise it chafes. How better could we respond to
Jesus’ words in today’s gospel than to pray: “Not what I want, Lord, but what
you want.”
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