Reading: Gen. 3:9-15; Ps. 130; 2Cor. 4:13-5:1; Mark 3:20-35
Rev.
Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.
IF YOU BELONG TO GOD’S FAMILY WHY SIN AGAINST THE HOLY SPIRIT
Having
a sense of belonging is fundamental to human happiness and well-being, for it
gives value to our lives and helps us in coping with some painful emotions.
Hence, we often want to identify with one another, with our friends and
families, with our culture or one association with another. However, one of the
common and safest places to belong is our families, especially when it is
rooted in the love of God and neighbour.
So,
today in our Gospel passage, Jesus speaks about belonging to his family and his
relationship with members of his family when he said: ‘Here are my mother and
my brothers. Anyone who does the will of my Father in heaven, he is my brother
and sister and mother.’ In this Gospel, Jesus speaks of two ways the people
around him could be identified as members of his family. Firstly, he talks
about those who belong to the family of his birth that is, his mother, father
and relations. Then his other family is made up of those who do the will of
God.
This
family he says, is his true family where doing the will of God is the only way
of belonging to this family. This is not to say that Jesus is rejecting his
family; to do so would contradict his teaching about loving one's parents and
loving one's neighbours. However, Jesus is using this opportunity to emphasize
that relationship with God is more important and this should depend on our
total commitment to doing the will of God through him.
Surprisingly,
Mary the mother of Jesus belongs to both sides of the family, for she gave
birth to Jesus and was also the first to do the will of God when she said, “Let
it be done unto me according to your word” (Luke 1:38). For this reason she is
the first disciple of Jesus and a model for all Christians. This is not the same
with Eve in our first reading who disobeyed God’s instructions for we heard the
Lord calling the man after he had eaten of the tree. ‘Where are you?’ what have
you done ‘I heard the sound of you in the garden;’ ‘I was afraid because I was
naked, so I hid.’ ‘Who told you that you were naked?’ the Lord asked ‘Have you
been eating of the tree I forbade you to eat?’ The man replied, ‘It was the
woman you put with me; she gave me the fruit, and I ate it.’ Then the Lord God
asked the woman, ‘What is this you have done?’
With this act of disobedience, humanity was
separated from our original family where doing the will of God is the guiding
principle. But God has not abandoned us for he still stretches his hand of
reconciliation.
Thus,
to be a Christian or a disciple is to respond to this act of reconciliation in
order to enter into the family of Jesus and embrace a new relationship with God
and with one another for this is the most important family we can belong. All
other bonds, including those of blood, should be considered secondary. Because
belonging to God is fundamental to our basic relationships before all human
relations. Remember, we belong first to God before belonging to our families,
after which we all go back to God where we ultimately belong, which is
determined by how we have been doing God’s will here on earth.
Little
wonder Jesus spoke about the sin against the Holy Spirit who is the primary
agent of evangelization. This is because some scribes who watched the great
miracle of the deliverance of a man who was possessed said that it was through
the power of Beelzebul the prince of demons that he was able to cast the devil
out. Because they were adamant in their opposition against Jesus which was
propelled by envy and jealousy.
So, it is obvious that the scribes knew the
truth but were not ready to accept it, rather they chose to deny the work of
God, that’s why Jesus said: everyone who says a word against the Son of Man
will be forgiven, but he who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be
forgiven.
From
this frightening passage, Jesus reveals to us that sins no matter how grievous
can be forgiven, but there is a particular sin that will not be forgiven. That
is the sin against the Holy Spirit. But what is this sin against the Holy
Spirit? And why would it not be forgiven? The sin against the Holy Spirit is
rooted in one's outright rejection of God’s mercy and grace of salvation
offered to us through the Holy Spirit‘s constant invitations and warnings.
This
happens when the will of a person is hardened against God’s mercy and goodness.
This is so because it is the sinner himself who rejected God’s forgiveness. And
since God respects the freedom which He has given us, for he respects the
sinner’s decision to firmly refuse to be forgiven.
Dear
friends, we are called today not to be like the scribes who out of pride and
ignorance denied the power of God over spiritual realities and so sin against
the Holy Spirit. This will be possible if we know where we ultimately and truly
belong. Though, as Christians, we claim to belong to God. But do our attitudes
and decisions show that we truly belong to God? Do we not often commit
ourselves to things contrary to the faith we professed in God? Can we say that
we are truly doing the will of God? What have we been doing with the word of
God we hear every day? What kind of fruit are we bearing in our family and
society? How has the word of God changed our life and disposition towards our
family?
Therefore,
we should ask God to endow us with the spirit of discernment and truth,
especially during this period when we are often faced with the ugly and sad
attitude of human deception all over the world.
LET US PRAY: Lord God, today we are called to
do your will always in order to truly belong to that true family of Jesus where
the love of you and our neighbour unites us together. Grant that we may learn
to do your will and never sin against the Holy Spirit. We ask this through
Christ our Lord. Do have a blessed Sunday.
No comments:
Post a Comment