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Pilate

EVERY ENDING HOLDS THE SEED of a NEW BEGINNING

November 22, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The readings this weekend, and for the past few weeks are about endings.  But we know that every ending signals a new beginning.  Every “good night” holds the promise of a “good morning!”  The sunset kisses the earth good-bye for a brief moment in time and surprises us with its rising on what seems to be the other side of the earth.  Every death is s hand-off to new life.  St. Augustine echoes this concept when he calls to God: “O Beauty, so ancient, so new.”  Every “good-bye” uncovers a “hello,” every ending a step to a new adventure.  When does the “NEW” become “NOW”?  When does “tomorrow” turn to “today”?  And do we let go of yesterday?  Where does it go?  The character Tevya in Fiddler on the Roof sings about this phenomena, “Sunrise, sunset, Swiftly flow the days.  Seedlings turn overnight to sunflowers, blossoming even as we gaze.  Sunrise, sunset, swiftly fly the years, one season following another.”

Have your experiences proven this concept to be true?  When we watch the “news” do we know what is accurate reporting and what is fake news, or what some refer to as “an alternate truth”?  In the gospel it is refreshing to hear Jesus testify to the truth.  In the verbal exchange between Jesus and Pilate, Jesus reveals, “For this I was born and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth.  Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.”

In John’s Gospel, Pilate asks – “What is truth?”  Jesus answers – “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”  A few evenings ago I was half-watching TV when out of my distraction I heard “So, what is truth?”  I’d started this reflection earlier in the day so the question seemed like part of another reality.  A World War II veteran was sharing that upon retirement from active service, he’s been “down in the dumps” experiencing a lack of appreciation for his years in service for our country in defense of freedom and truth.  Then he’d recalled Jesus words, “The truth shall make you free.”  He had turned his bitterness into working with youth when he came to the realization that “The truth that makes you free, is the truth that stirs you to action.”

Isn’t this exactly what Jesus’ life and teachings call us to?  This weekend we observe the feast of Christ, the King.  The feast was instituted in 1925 and was raised to a solemnity 2015.  At that time Pope Francis added to the title of the day – “the living face of the Father’s mercy.”  We are celebrating a ruler who, in mercy, was willing to die for us, for all humanity, to give us true freedom.  Jesus radically redefined the concept of kingship in contrast to the oppression so prevalent in His day.  He’d exchanged the trappings of a king for a place among the poorest of the poor.  In place of a red carpet he’d had a rude stable floor strewn with hay.  Later in his life, it was palm branches that lined the way beneath a donkey’s feet.  His crown, not one of gems, but a crown of thorns.  His mode of transportation usually on foot.  Of his home, Jesus said “Foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.”

But why read a scene from the passion today?  How does that help us understand what Jesus’ kingship means?  We always feel some vagueness in calling Jesus “king” partly due to the changing attitudes toward kings throughout history.  We ponder – how can He be, at the same time, both Suffering Servant and king?  It’s a strange question that Jesus turns on Pilate.  “Do you ask this (are you a king) on your own or have others told you about me?”  It pushes us to question ourselves – Is Jesus my King?  Do I know Him on my own?  Does it spring from my own experiences?  Or is my relationship with Jesus based on borrowed thoughts from books I’ve read?  The sermons I’ve heard?  Do I sing with conviction the sentiments of the kingly hymns that spring to mind: “Come, Christians, Join to Sing; Rejoice, the Lord Is King, When Morning Gilds the Skies, All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name.  Hail, Redeemer, King Divine, The King of Glory.  At the Lord’s Feast we sing, praise to our victorious King.”  And, we must not overlook the triumphant echoing of a favorite Christmas carol – “Joy to the World!”

On this last Sunday in the church year, we hear from the Book of Revelation (Sunday’s second reading) – “Behold, he is coming and everyone will see him; the Alpha and the Omega, the one who is and who was and who is to come.”  By the end of this week we will be jump-started into the Season of Advent …  another experience of an “ending” that is a “beginning” – a time of waiting for the One who will come.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

 

Have a good week and a splendid Thanksgiving

  Stay safe – be healthy – know peace

 

First Reading:  Daniel 7:13-14        Second Reading:  Revelation 1:5-8
Gospel:  John 18:33-37
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Advent, Be healthy, Fiddler on the Roof, good morning, good night, Happy Tahnksgiving, Jesus, Joy to the World, Know peave, Pilate, Season of Advent, Stay safe, testify to the truth

Novemeber 21st and 22nd was the Feast of Christ the King

November 23, 2015 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

pontius pilateThis Gospel is a very familiar incident in the life of Jesus – many reflections have been written about it – so, today I offer you a different perspective on the occasion …  this one was related to me by Claudia, the wife of Pilate [adapted]

I wonder sometimes, if they might have been friends this Jesus and my husband Pilate. If they had met in some other circumstances, I think they might have liked each other. Afterall, they were about the same age. They were both passionate, committed, opinionated. Bullheaded sometimes.  And intelligent too.   Except they thought so differently.  Jesus was a Jew. Pilate was a Roman. And Pilate never understood the Jews.  “You can’t get a clear answer out of them about anything,” he would fume. “Ask them a straight, logical question and they tell you a story or sing you a song!”

Pilate knew perfectly well he would never have gotten the appointment as Governor if he hadn’t been married to me, the granddaughter of the Emperor Augustus. And even at that, Judea wasn’t exactly a plum of an appointment. But Pilate hoped that his next appointment would be more prestige, a little closer to Rome; something he and I would both be proud of.

But in Judea things had gotten off to a bad start – he’d had a showdown with the Jewish leaders over whether Caesar’s image could be displayed in the temple area. It was a dumb thing to fight about and Pilate knew it. “But I’ve got to show them I am strong and resolute, Claudia,” he said to me. “If I show just a hint of weakness, if I back down even an inch, that snake of a high priest, Caiaphas, will take every slight advantage that I give him.”

Judea was a ‘no-win’ situation for him. The bureaucrats in Rome just read the bottom line. Did he collect his quota in taxes? Did he avoid any embarrassments? If the answer was “yes” to those questions, you stayed on and maybe eventually got promoted to a better posting. If “no” you were recalled to Rome and sent to shuffle papers in an office somewhere. Judea was so much more complicated than they realized.

Pilate tried. How he tried! He read that blessed policy manual every night and memorized every procedure. But of course the manual procedures never fit reality. “Who wrote this stuff anyway,” he fumed. “I bet they’ve never been outside of Rome. They sure as the dickens have never been out here in the boonies of Judea.”

And then the Jesus business broke. It was a recipe for disaster. Pilate couldn’t win this one and I knew it and I think he knew it. I even had dreams about it. “Get this man Jesus out of your life, Pilate,” I said, “No matter what you do, you’ll lose,”  “I’ll do what’s appropriate and necessary, Claudia,” Pilate said in his official voice, which meant that he was frightened. “I will interview the prisoner and judge him according to our Roman justice. He will be treated fairly.”  And there the conversation ended.

When they brought the prisoner up to the Prætorium. Pilate met them outside, a gesture of good will.  He interviewed Jesus there in front of the Jewish leaders.  “Look,” he finally said. “the guy is just a little crazy, and yes, a bit of a trouble-maker. But he hasn’t done anything to deserve execution. I mean, I can’t have him killed just because you people don’t like him. What I’ll do is have him flogged. That’ll straighten him out.”  Well, you should have heard the hullabaloo. “We want him dead!” they yelled. “Give us Barabus! We want him crucified!”

Listen. My husband has integrity. He wasn’t about to execute a man unless a crime had been committed, and blasphemy against the Hebrew God was no crime in Roman eyes. But Pilate was no fool either. He knew that Caiaphas had his ways of getting messages to Rome.  What followed was a mish-mash of political maneuvering and charges and counter charges. I don’t quite know what happened. I was in bed for most of it, fighting one of my migraines.

But I won’t not soon forget what happened when Pilate dragged this Jesus up into our quarters, away from all the yelling and screaming outside. That was when it struck me how alike they were, and yet how different. Two men of talent and integrity speaking to each across such vastly different realities.

In spite of all the pressure, Pilate still wanted to do the right thing. “Look,” he said to Jesus. “Give me a reason, give me something, anything that’ll satisfy that mob–something I can put in my report to Rome so I don’t have to have you killed.” Jesus looked right back at Pilate–looked through him. But he said nothing.

Pilate lost his cool. “Look, don’t you know I have the power of life and death over you. I can send you out to be torn apart by that mob, or I can save your hide.”  “You have no real power over me,” said Jesus. “No power that really counts. You and I are caught in this evil drama. You have your role to play and I have mine.  “All right,” said Pilate. “What is your role except to satisfy the blood-lust of that mob?”  “I am called to live the truth,” said Jesus.  “What is truth?” Pilate asked quietly, almost cynically. Jesus looked at him intently. And yes, compassionately. But he said nothing.   “Look, I asked you a question. What is truth?” Pilate lost his cool again. He paced around the room and banged his fist against the wall. But both men knew, I think, that Jesus could not reply in any way that Pilate could comprehend.

The conversation stopped. There was nothing else to say. Jesus would die. And Pilate knew he’d spend the rest of his life rehearsing that conversation. “Why couldn’t he just explain to me, logically and rationally what he was up to?” Pilate asked that question over and over.

I too have rehearsed that conversation. I am back in Rome now, by myself. Pilate has been banished from the capitol.  Pilate did not understand Jesus or any of the Jews.

And yet I wonder:  If Pilate and this Jesus had met some other way, perhaps they would have learned to like each other – if they had a chance to really talk, without the pressure. Pilate, the logical philosopher might have discovered the poetic dreamer deep inside himself. And Jesus the poetic dreamer, might have shown to Pilate the philosophy on which his dream was built.  There would have been respect at least. And just perhaps they might have seen themselves as brothers.

                                                                                                   Reflection by S. Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress
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Filed Under: Homily, Prayer Tagged With: Bible, Jesus, marriage, Pilate, understanding, wife

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