Mark
9:38-43.45.47-48
38 John
spoke up, "Teacher, we saw a man using your name to expel demons and we
stopped him because he wasn't in our group." 39 Jesus wasn't pleased.
"Don't stop him. No one can use my name to do something good and powerful,
and in the next breath cut me down. 40 If he's not an enemy, he's an ally. 41
Why, anyone by just giving you a cup of water in my name is on our side. Count
on it that God will notice. 42 "On the other hand, if you give one of
these simple, childlike believers a hard time, bullying or taking advantage of
their simple trust, you'll soon wish you hadn't. You'd be better off dropped in
the middle of the lake with a millstone around your neck. 43 - 45 "If your
hand or your foot gets in God's way, chop it off and throw it away. You're
better off maimed or lame and alive than the proud owner of two hands and two
feet, godless in a furnace of eternal fire. 47 And if your eye distracts you
from God, pull it out and throw it away. 48 You're better off one-eyed and
alive than exercising your twenty-twenty vision from inside the fire of hell.
49 "Everyone's going through a refining fire sooner or later, 50 but
you'll be well-preserved, protected from the eternal flames. Be preservatives
yourselves. Preserve the peace."
Numbers
11:25-29
GOD came
down in a cloud and spoke to Moses and took some of the Spirit that was on him
and put it on the seventy leaders. When the Spirit rested on them they prophesied.
But they didn't continue; it was a onetime event. 26 Meanwhile two men, Eldad
and Medad, had stayed in the camp. They were listed as leaders but they didn't
leave camp to go to the Tent. Still, the Spirit also rested on them and they
prophesied in the camp. 27 A young man ran and told Moses, "Eldad and
Medad are prophesying in the camp!" 28 Joshua son of Nun, who had been
Moses' right-hand man since his youth, said, "Moses, master! Stop
them!" 29 But Moses said, "Are you jealous for me? Would that all
GOD's people were prophets. Would that GOD would put his Spirit on all of
them."
Food for
thought!
What do you
think of these two Readings? They both deal with something called jealousy and
tolerance. Jealousy does not always come from bad people alone; sometimes it
comes from good people like you and me. Did you notice that in the first
Reading who is jealous is Joshua, who had been Moses' right-hand man since his
youth; and in the Gospel Reading is John, the Beloved disciple?
Even good
people can be jealous. I can be jealous; you can be jealous. So the question
is, why do people who are blessed jealous of other blessed people? Good people
like Joshua and John intolerant of other people trying to do good? Why do we
stop people who are doing, not evil, but good? John says that it is because
they do not belong to our group!
Many
Christian people lament that God no longer has a place in our world today.
Maybe we are looking in the wrong places. If we looked beyond the Tent of
Meeting and beyond those who belong to our group, it might surprise us to see
that God is as active in our world today as He has always been. He may be
working with those we regard as the wrong people, and in places we deem to be
the wrong places.
It is wrong
for any of us to think that our church has a monopoly of salvation. Why?
Because there are many ways to God. He has his own secret stairway into every
heart. He fulfills himself in many ways; and no man or church has a monopoly of
his truth.
But--and
this is intensely important--our tolerance must be based not on indifference
but on love. We ought to be tolerant not because we could not care less; but
because we look at the other person with eyes of love. When Abraham Lincoln was
criticized for being too lenient to his enemies and reminded that it was his
duty to destroy them, he gave the great answer, "Do I not destroy my
enemies when I make them my friends?" Even if a man be utterly mistaken,
we must never regard him as an enemy to be destroyed but as a strayed friend to
be recovered by love.
Mk. 9:41-42
Whoever
gives you a cup of water to drink on the ground that you belong to Christ, I
tell you truly he will not lose his reward. And whoever puts a stumbling-block
in the path of one of these little ones who believe in me, it is better for him
that a great millstone hang about his neck and he be cast into the sea.
The teaching
of this passage declares that any kindness shown, any help given, will not go
unnoticed. Jesus says, WHOEVER, that is, anybody of any race, sex, religion or
colour. He does not say any Catholic or any Christian, but whoever! This means
that there many disciples of Jesus out there that we do not know; that do not
belong to our group.
And it is to
be noted how simple the help is. The gift is a CUP OF WATER. We are not asked
to do great things for others, things beyond our power. We are asked to give
the simple things that anybody can afford.
The opposite
is also true. To help is to win the eternal reward. To cause a weaker brother
to stumble is to win the eternal punishment. To sin is terrible but to teach
another to sin is infinitely worse. God is not hard on the sinner, but he will
be stern to the person who makes it easier for another to sin, and whose
conduct, either thoughtless or deliberate, puts a stumbling-block in the path
of a weaker brother.
Jesus
mention the “hand” the “foot” and the “eye”. These are our three problem areas
when it comes to dealing with sin. The “hand” refers to “the things we do.” The
“foot” refers to “the places we go.” The “eye” refers to “the things we see or
desire to have.” These three words describe the problem areas where we humans
are tempted most. They are the areas that need our attention, other wise they
can lead us to sin, as often they do.
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