Wednesday, May 8, 2013

How does one follow Jesus?

Look, a cute baby:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Now for the lesson (you can look at babies when you are done, I promise):
 
How does one follow Jesus? There are many ways, many perfect ways in which one can live their life as a follower of Jesus. Catholics have a good number of orders such as Franciscans, Dominicans, and others. These are disciplined and orderly successions of priests and laity following in the footsteps of their founders. One thing on common with all of these is discipleship.

In the Gospel of Mark there is a clear message of discipleship as Jesus recruits the Apostles. What we see when Jesus offers the Apostles the opportunity to follow Him is the perfect way in which one responds to the call of Jesus to discipleship.

As Jesus approaches and seeks out the first, being Simon and Andrew (1:16-18), James and John (1:19-20), we notice four distinct interactions: Jesus passing by, Jesus offering with “follow me”, the new disciples immediately responding leaving their nets, and following. The seeking, the offering, the leaving, and the following; four elements for discipleship in Christ. Notice Jesus, the Son of God seeking out individuals for His own discipleship. The same man that said if he is lifted up he will draw the whole world to Himself, sets out in the region to find the Apostles. They refer to Him as their rabbi. The usual rabbi would sit, Jesus would stand. The usual custom is for disciples to stand and listen, while the disciples of Jesus sat and asked questions if necessary. Perhaps this is one contributing reason to people thinking of Jesus approach as “a new teaching” or “one who teaching with His own authority.” Certainly following Jesus is not like following other teachers.

So the disciples respond in perfection: they immediately leave everything behind. But their leaving is not meaningless and Mark is gracious enough to supplement this for us. They leave for the purpose of following. Leaving with a purpose, following with faith. There is an Old Testament parallel to this scene. In 1 Kings 19 we see Elijah passing Elisha by, and offering discipleship in the manner of “throwing his mantle over him.” Elisha responds by catching up to Elijah (probably a little surprised by the gesture) and informing the prophet that he will say goodbye to his family and then will come and follow. Acceptable? I think so.  I mean, Jesus tells us to “count the cost” before following. Faith moves and if it moves fast, fine. If it moves with carefulness, fine. There is only one Peter, and he even needed some proof when His brother told him he believed he had found the messiah.

G.K. Chesterton says “no one comes to conversion at the same angle”. Mark the Evangelist is not recording this account like a journalist by leaving out some teaching or agenda. Instead he gives two accounts (1:16-18, 1:19-20) with the same pattern as if to say “look, this is the right way to do it!” Response to Jesus is a daily task in the truest meaning – and it can be one to be taken with some consideration – but the perfect disciple stands firm, saying “your will be done” or in the words of the Mother of God, “let it be done to me according to your will.”

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