In one of his many letters, St. Augustine declared, “The way to Christ is first through humility, second through humility, third through humility” (Letters 118:22). I think the young man in today’s Gospel could have benefitted from this piece of advice.
Let’s consider all the things he believed he did well. He hadn’t killed anyone, he hadn’t committed adultery. He wasn’t a thief or a liar. He honored his parents and, according to his own estimation, he loved his neighbor as he loved himself. Based on the young man’s answer to Jesus, he appears to be very self assured that he is doing all the right things. Perhaps he was even asking Jesus as a mere formality, just looking for confirmation of the status he was already confident of.
Jesus doesn’t confirm or deny the man’s apparent perfection according to the commandments. It is possible that he truly was perfect in all these things. But he wasn’t humble about it, and this is the crux of the issue.
For all the good works the man was doing, he had something besides God as his motivating factor. If God were truly the center of his life, the source of his joy, and the concern of his every action, then Jesus’ request would not have been a problem. This young man desired to do good work, yes, but for the sake of the reward. He even states it in his opening question: “What good must I do to gain eternal life?” His pride, his occupation with status and comfort, blind him to the possibility that his heart is not in the right place. He is like a student who, with inflated pride, believes he already knows all the answers before the class even begins.
Jesus turns the tables on the man and hones in on the man’s preoccupation with reward. By asking him to give up what he had so carefully acquired, Jesus is stripping him of what he perceived to be the greatest good. The point isn’t a reward to be checked off on a list of many accomplishments. To follow Jesus means to follow Him wherever He takes you.
As Catholics we believe that Jesus, especially Jesus in the Eucharist, is the source and summit of our faith. This means that when we follow Jesus, we are being nourished and strengthened by Him as the source of our journey. And at the same time, we are already in the midst of the Kingdom of God because where Jesus is, there the Kingdom is. If we walk with Jesus, we walk as Kingdom people, already living in some mysterious way in the light of the Kingdom of Heaven. When we are humble, we fix our eyes on Jesus and order the rest of our lives according to this truth.
En una de sus muchas cartas, San Agustín declaró: “Ese camino [a Cristo] es: primero, la humildad; segundo, la humildad; tercero, la humildad” (Cartas 118,22). Creo que el joven del Evangelio de hoy podría haberse beneficiado de este consejo.
Consideremos todas las cosas que creía haber hecho bien. No había matado a nadie, no había cometido adulterio. No era ladrón ni mentiroso. Honraba a sus padres y, según su propia opinión, amaba al prójimo como a sí mismo. Según la respuesta del joven a Jesús, parece estar muy seguro de estar haciendo todo bien. Quizás incluso le preguntaba a Jesús como una mera formalidad, buscando confirmar la posición en la que ya estaba seguro.
Jesús no confirma ni niega la aparente perfección del hombre según los mandamientos. Es posible que realmente fuera perfecto en todas estas cosas. Pero no fue humilde al respecto, y este es el punto decisivo del asunto.
A pesar de todas las buenas obras que este hombre realizaba, tenía algo más que Dios como su motivación. Si Dios fuera realmente el centro de su vida, la fuente de su alegría y la preocupación de cada una de sus acciones, entonces la petición de Jesús no habría sido un problema. Este joven deseaba hacer buenas obras, sí, pero por la recompensa. Incluso lo expresa en su pregunta inicial: “¿Qué cosas buenas tengo que hacer para conseguir la vida eterna?” Su orgullo, su preocupación por el estatus y la comodidad lo ciegan a la posibilidad de que su corazón no esté en el lugar correcto. Es como un estudiante que, con orgullo inflado, cree que ya sabe todas las respuestas antes de que comience la clase.
Jesús le da la vuelta a la tortilla y se centra en su preocupación por la recompensa. Al pedirle que renuncie a lo que había adquirido con tanto esfuerzo, lo despoja de lo que percibía como el mayor bien. No se trata de una recompensa para marcar en una lista de muchos logros. Seguir a Jesús significa seguirlo adondequiera que Él te lleve.
Como católicos, creemos que Jesús, especialmente Jesús en la Eucaristía, es la fuente y la cumbre de nuestra fe. Esto significa que cuando seguimos a Jesús, Él nos nutre y nos fortalece como fuente de nuestro camino. Y, al mismo tiempo, ya estamos en medio del Reino de Dios, porque donde está Jesús, allí está el Reino. Si caminamos con Jesús, caminamos como personas del Reino, viviendo ya, de alguna manera misteriosa, en la luz del Reino de los Cielos. Cuando somos humildes, fijamos nuestra mirada en Jesús y ordenamos el resto de nuestras vidas según esta verdad.
Kate Taliaferro is an Air Force wife and mother. She is blessed to be able to homeschool, bake bread and fold endless piles of laundry. When not planning a school day, writing a blog post or cooking pasta, Kate can be found curled up with a book or working with some kind of fiber craft. Kate blogs at DailyGraces.net.
Feature Image Credit: Artem Podrez, pexels.com/photo/grayscale-photo-of-man-looking-at-boxes-5025628/
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