Lectionary: 35 and 38
One of the
Twelve, who was called Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and said,
“What are you willing to give me
if I hand him over to you?”
“What are you willing to give me
if I hand him over to you?”
Saint Matthew’s Passion Narrative begins with two events,
Judas’ betrayal and Jesus’ Last Supper. We could never understand what we’re
about to witness without retelling these stories.
Judas does more than set in motion the series of events –
what in ancient times was called the “machinery” of the drama. He represents
the imbedded sin in every human heart, that willingness to betray everything
that is holy and good.
To our endless consternation, there would be no drama – no passion
narrative – without his betrayal. We might even think his crime is some kind of
blessing, except for Jesus’ chilling remark, “It would be better for that man if he had never been born.”
Betrayal is a
terrible thing; we might even call it the original sin. First there is that
deep, manifest affection between two lovers: the Lord and Adam, Moses and the
Hebrews, David and his King Saul, Jesus and Judas. They are easy, happy and
safe within each other’s company. There is nothing they cannot say to one
another. Then a rift develops, but only one party knows it: Adam eats the
forbidden fruit and discovers his nakedness; the Hebrews’ discontent in the
wilderness, Saul’s unexpected jealousy, Judas’ greed or disenchantment. (Only
one evangelist supposes he was greedy; the others cannot divine a motive.) Then the rupture occurs and the victim gasps:
For it is not an enemy that reviled me –
that I could bear –
Not a foe who viewed me with contempt,
from that I could hide.
But it was you, my other self,
my comrade and friend,
You, whose company I enjoyed,
at whose side I walked
in the house of God. (Psalm 55:13-15)
The victim is
doomed as the drama unfolds toward its inevitable end.
In the Passion of
Jesus we should see the betrayal as the requirement that Jesus must drink the
bitter cup to its dregs. Like his Baptism in the Jordan, it is necessary.
The incident fits
the rest of the story with Peter’s denial, the disciples’ flight into the night,
the viciousness of the Jewish authorities and the merciless policies of the
Romans.
Jesus’ death must
be a solitary bright light in a pitch dark firmament, like the Star of
Bethlehem. It must draw our attention and we must keep our eyes fixed on it, as
to a lamp shining in a dark place, until
day dawns and the morning star rises in our hearts.
Finally, the
betrayal occurs as Jesus presides at the Last Supper, the first Mass. Several
of our Eucharistic Prayers specifically mention the betrayal. It will always
remain like a thorn in the flesh to remind us that our ways are not God’s ways.
We would celebrate Christmas without darkness and Easter without Good Friday;
we would have families without skeletons, ointments without flies and silver
linings without clouds.
Judas’ betrayal
remains because we must know the intensity and purity of God’s love for us. That
light must shine brilliantly in the darkness of every human heart.
The passion is the key to Christianity. I love Pam Sunday.
ReplyDeleteChris
Owner CEL Financial Services
http://www.taxprepfillmore.com/christopher-lee-owner-cel-financial-services