Thursday, December 14, 2023

 Memorial of Saint John of the Cross

(Isaiah 41:13-20; Matthew 11:11-15)

The violence to which Jesus refers in the gospel seems to be Herod’s seizure of John.  Shortly, Jesus will receive word that John has been beheaded.  Jesus too will suffer a violent death.  In truth the Kingdom as Jesus says, is being taken over by violent men.

However, God will upend the violence.  With the resurrection Jesus’ Roman executioners will fall to the ground as if they were dead.  As Second Isaiah predicts in the first reading, the Lord God will redeem those subject to violence. 

As much as any theologian, John of the Cross describes the suffering of those who participate in the Kingdom.  Their ordeals are as much existential as it is physical.  Often, he says, they feel that they are abandoned by God in their need.  They experience, in John’s words, “the dark night of the soul.”          ‘ Their faithfulness in this trial, however, opens them to God’s mercy as He acts on their behalf.  They come to know God as their loving redeemer who in death will save them from oblivion.