Monday, 16 February 2009

Tuesday 17th February 2009


Ecclesiastes 7:15-29 (http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=101853937)
How difficult it is to keep your own integrity in the face of so many alternative agendas among the people we live with. How much more difficult must that be for the one who has power!  Everyone seems to want something. And we are no different among all these different agendas and needs. We each have our own hopes and expectations so we cannot be too quick to judge.

But is this the end of the journey of wisdom? An awareness of the complexity of human life and relations, of the schemes and plans of so may people and how that will work out. Or is there more......

John 19:17-30 (http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=101854069)

Jesus transcends this turmoil of human agendas. He is fixed on God's agenda. He forgoes His own will and the temptations of power, wealth and safety and sacrifices them all to live and die in an alternative way - a way that is completely righteous. This goes beyond the teaching of Solomon, it goes beyond the wisdom of man - it is most certainly not sensible from the perspective of a life lived out solely in this world - but it is the wisdom of God. As St. Paul would say this apparent 'foolishness' of God is wiser than man's wisdom and it draws all who would follow Jesus into the ways that make for peace.

Thoughts

These two readings define the problem and the solution of the turmoil of human existence.

Solomon has searched deep and his wisdom cannot break out of the circles of power and the conflicts of interest that is his experience of life and those around him.

Jesus, on the other hand, THE Son of David and THE true King has submitted His own will to God so completely that he has been able to find a way to relinquish the human passions that result in manipulation and conflict with others. He has liberated himself and those who will follow into a new way that will bring deep peace in this world and wholeness in the next. This of course is where faith transcends reason - where wisdom becomes foolish as it seems that the only way to win is to lose; but the truth is that life is not about winning or losing in any competitive sense but about learning to play a different game altogether.

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