Fr Paul Gooley reads from the Gospel of Luke (10: 13-16) in which Jesus says, ‘Whoever listens to you listens to me; whoever rejects you rejects me; but whoever rejects me rejects him who sent me’.
Fr Paul says the failure of the Jews, as a whole, to respond to the Messiah was one of the sadnesses of the first Christian generation. Paul struggles with it in Romans 9-11, finally attesting that the mercy of God is such that the Chosen People will be saved in the end. But frequently in the New Testament the Old Testament is invoked to explain events in the life of Jesus, and this mystery is no exception. It is explained as the fulfilment of the prophetic statement in Isaiah 6-9, ‘They will look and look but not perceive, listen and listen but not hear.’
The tragic fulfilment of Jesus’ words in this Gospel is starkly illustrated by the ruins of villages of Chorazin and Bethsaida on the north coast of the Lake of Galilee. The former, a shambles of black basalt rocks, sits forlorn on the hill above the Lake. A ruin named Bethsaida lies, partially excavated, just on the other side of the Jordan, but has not yet yielded enough evidence even to justify a firm conclusion about its identity. The most chilling judgement is reserved for Capernaum, in the quotations from Isaiah 14, hoping ‘to be raised high as heaven’ but in fact ‘flung down to hell’.
For our reflection today Fr Paul invites us to consider: How do I respond to Jesus? Do I ignore him and ignore his message like those in today’s Gospel? Or do I respond like yesterday’s 72 disciples and go out and share the message of Jesus with others by what I say and do?
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