Monday, April 25, 2022

Saint Mark

  

Just before the risen Lord commands his disciples, Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to every creature, he rebukes them sharply for their lack of faith and hardness of heart (16:14). Now, the command to evangelize does not follow very logically from that rebuke, does it? Nevertheless, the text stands, and verse 15 follows irreversibly from verse 14. Yes, it is to these very flawed and fearful persons that Jesus, God’s eternal Wisdom, entrusts the salvation of the world. Jesus does not go off looking for perfect shining saints. Why? No doubt because he knows that the conversion of deeply flawed humanity can best be achieved through equally flawed yet converted individuals, and the Eleven lead the way of all the converted.

And what is the powerful marvel that converts hearts and minds so that they come to love and serve only the compassionate God of truth? The very first verse of St. Mark’s Gospel spells it out in seven resounding syllables. This marvel is not a thing but a person: Jesus Christ, the Son of God.

Let us too, then, deeply flawed though we are, pledge our whole lives to Christ, trusting boundlessly in his presence and help. We are what we are: such he made us and as such does he love us. Let us never doubt God’s generosity and humor in choosing precisely us. And once he has grasped us in his strong hands, surely he will not let us drop!

Giorgio Vasari, Saint Mark, 1570-1571, oil on panel, 70 × 39 in.,National Gallery, Washington, DC. Reflection by Father Simeon.