Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Feast if Saint James, apostle

(II Corinthians 4:7-17; Matthew 20:20-28)

The request for positions on Jesus’ right and left and the indignation of the others reflect immature thinking.  No doubt the disciples realize that some sacrifice is required of apostles.  But they hardly can know of the peril of preaching Jesus Christ in a world partly set against him.

St. Paul in the first reading suffers no illusions.  He has been on the road preaching for years and bears bruises on his body for it.  James, the elder of Zebedee’s sons, will learn before too long what Paul writes of.  He will be the first apostle to be martyred.  It will be a state killing as Herod Agrippa orders his murder for unspecified reasons (see Acts 12:1-3).

It would have been wonderful to have walked with Jesus.  After all, he not only had the words of eternal life, but was eternal life.  But let us not suffer any illusion that it was an easy thing to do, day after day and week after week.  We should experience some of the happiness and some of the challenge as we receive him in the Eucharist and live his teaching.