In this past weekend’s gospel reading, two Apostles lobby for positions
of perceived greatness. James and John
ask Jesus, “Grant that in your glory we may sit one at your right and the other
at your left (MK 10:37).” A few
interesting things happen subsequently.
Jesus rather curtly tells these two Apostles they are clueless, “You do
not know what you are asking (MK 10:38).”
It inspires all the Apostles to argue (MK 10:41). And, Jesus settles the Apostles’ argument by
saying:
“You know that those who are recognized as rulers over the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones make their authority over them felt. But it shall not be so among you. Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you will be your servant; whoever wishes to be first among you will be the slave of all. For the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many (MK 10:42-45).”
Church leaders stress some of Jesus’ sayings but this does not seem to
be amongst their favorites, especially lately.
“Lording it over” others based upon perceived authority seems to be
standard operating procedure for many clergy.
How many of us have heard statements like this from an ordained minister?
- I’m the boss
- I’m in charge
- I’m the pastor
- Do it my way
- If you don’t like it my way, then leave
These attitudes which directly contradict Jesus’ “anti-lording-it-over”
message in last weekend’s gospel stem from something else Jesus said - specifically,
“…you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of
the netherworld shall not prevail against it.
I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in
heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven (MT 16:18-19).”
From this MT 16 passage, church leaders justify general apostolic authority
as well as the pope’s supreme authority, following in the tradition of Peter. The pope even has an official title
associated with that passage, “Successor of Peter.” However, the pope has another official title
based upon last weekend’s reading too, “Servant of the Servants of God” (“Servus
Servorum Dei” in Latin). This title does
not get much airtime these days. Why not?
The MT 16 passage isn’t the only place Jesus grants authority to hold
things loosed or bound. Later, in MT
18:18 he tells his disciples (not just the apostles), “Amen, I say to you,
whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on
earth shall be loosed in heaven.” It
seems Jesus grants the same authorities to all followers that he granted to Peter,
and chronologically does so after granting them to Peter. Why isn’t this emphasized by church leaders? Why instead do they fixate upon papal and apostolic
authorities?
Furthermore, the story about the Apostles arguing and Jesus instructing
them not to “lord it over” others also appears in Matthew’s gospel. Reading through these events in Matthew’s gospel
we see these three events unfold with the following chronology:
- Jesus grants Peter authority to hold things loosed or bound (MT 16).
- Then Jesus grants all disciples (not Apostles) authority to hold things loosed or bound (MT 18).
- Then Jesus tells the Apostles (not the disciples) not to “lord it over” others and to be servants of all (MT 20).
Somehow it seemed ironic to hear that gospel instruction read shortly
after people responded “And with your spirit”, one of several wording changes directly
resulting from today’s apostles “lording it over” each other and the laity.
Hierarchical leaders are not the only people “lording it over”
others. Some laypeople in their zeal for
their perception of God’s or apostolic approval, “lord it over” others
too. Thus, we have some “evangelization”
efforts that closely resemble bullying as people try to protect the terms “Catholic”
and “Christian” from people they choose to hold bound to various things, or try
to impose their beliefs upon others. It
would seem that the “apostles’ way or the highway” crowd try to save the church
(the Body of Christ) from precisely the people Christ came to save, or some
might say, from Christ himself.
Take heart. Jesus told the
Apostles and disciples many times including in last weekend’s reading that they
are clueless. Saying you get to hold
people bound or loosed doesn’t mean you get to write the rules. You get to decide how they will be enforced.
Interestingly enough, last weekend’s Psalm gave guidance on enforcement
as it spoke of God’s mercy (Ps 33). Similarly,
Jesus repeatedly tells his followers God desires mercy not sacrifice (MT 9:13,
MT 12:7). Thus stringing all these
thoughts together, perhaps the message is that we all can hold things loosed or
bound but we are to err on the side of holding things loosed (i.e., showing “mercy”).
Mercy is showing compassion versus cruelty, indifference or hatred. It is offering forgiveness when it is within
your power to punish, censure, or blame.
It deters or alleviates suffering rather than imposes it.
What is our balance of holding things bound versus loosed? How do we show mercy? Do we follow people who hold more things
bound or hold more things loosed?
Think about today’s societal topics and reflect upon your
attitudes: How do you treat the jobless,
homeless, poor, uneducated, weak? How do
you treat people whose sexual mores differ from yours? How do you treat their children? How do you treat the immigrant? How do you treat people whose religious
beliefs and practices differ from yours?
Do you wrap yourself in self-righteousness (i.e. hold things bound) or
do you emit mercy (i.e. hold things loosed)?
Do we spend time senselessly arguing who is greatest? If you are in a position of power, do you
lord it over others?