Discipleship Takes Risks

In Sunday’s readings, Jesus sends out seventy-two disciples on a missionary journey, granting them significant spiritual authority.  Wasn’t that risky?

Gospel (Read Lk 10:1-12, 17-20)

As Jesus traveled to Jerusalem from Galilee for the last time, St. Luke tells us He commissioned seventy-two disciples “whom He sent ahead of Him in pairs to every town and place He intended to visit.”  In His reliance on others to help Him proclaim the kingdom of God, He reminds us of Moses, who commissioned seventy elders to be prophets in Israel during the Exodus (see Num 11:24-25).  The Sanhedrin, with its seventy-one elders, modeled itself after this leadership structure. Why seventy?  In Genesis, we find that there were seventy nations that formed the foundation of the ancient world.  The ministry of approximately seventy disciples, therefore, anticipates a worldwide spread of the Gospel.

Jesus sees the readiness of the “harvest” of God’s people.  The world’s long anticipation of Someone to come save it was now being fulfilled.  Jesus speaks of the timing as entirely within God’s Providence.  Although the “harvest” is “abundant,” it is God Who will choose and send the laborers to reap it.  All that led up to the Incarnation in the history of the world, and all that follows from it is in God’s hands.  

Jesus gives specific instructions to the disciples.  This is to be a brief expedition, because Jesus Himself will follow after their visits. No need to pack and prepare for a long stay.  Because of its brevity and urgency, announcing the arrival of Jesus, they must avoid all distractions (“greet no one along the way”).  They are to accept the hospitality of those to whom they are sent (“the laborer deserves his payment”).  This is the principle, often repeated in the New Testament (see 1 Cor 9:14; 1 Tim 5:18), that those working in the service of the Gospel are to be supported by the beneficiaries of that service.  The Church, therefore, following this instruction, obligates her members to contribute to the Church from their earnings (see CCC 2043, 2122). We give our tithes not because the priest asks it of us, but because Jesus does.

The disciples are to cure the sick and to preach the coming of God’s kingdom.  Those who do not receive them are to receive a warning.  Jews were familiar with this action of shaking dust off their shoes.  They did it whenever they traveled into Gentile territory and then returned to the Holy Land.  It was a sign that they wanted to separate themselves from the uncleanness of the pagans, who lived outside God’s covenant.  For the disciples to use this gesture against Jewish towns that refused to receive them or Jesus would be a strong statement indeed, because it would suggest that the covenant people of God, by this rejection, were actually rejecting that covenant.  Stiff medicine!

When the seventy-two returned from their work, what did they first want to tell Jesus?  “Lord, even the demons are subject to us because of Your Name.”  Ah, yes. Might we have expected this?  And isn’t this why it was risky for Jesus, then and now, to build His Church through human beings?  

The disciples returned with heady excitement over the authority they were able to exercise.  It can be intoxicating to have power like this.  Jesus acknowledges that His kingdom makes advances against the forces of Satan through the laborers in His Church.  However, He warns them not to “rejoice because the spirits are subject to you, but rejoice because your names are written in heaven.”  It will not be apostolic success that matters eternally; it will be the obedience that comes from faith that will write our names (and keep them) in the heavenly “book of life” (see Ex 32:32; Ps 69:28; Dan 12:1; Rev 3:5).  Jesus was willing to take the risks that come with building a human Church, sharing His authority and power with mere men. What a remarkable statement of God’s love for the creatures made in His image and likeness.  May He give us grace to walk worthy of it.

Possible response: Lord Jesus, help me stay focused on doing what You ask of me, not on the outcome.

First Reading (Read Isa 66:10-14c)

This reading comes from a portion of Isaiah’s prophecy in which he foretells a great restoration of Jerusalem, home to God’s covenant people.  This would come after its utter devastation from Babylonian conquest, punishment for sin.  Jerusalem will be a place of delight, abundance, comfort, and joy.  When was this fulfilled?  It began to be fulfilled in our Gospel reading, when Jesus sent His disciples out to cure the sick and preach about the coming of Jesus.  That was a time when “the Lord’s power shall be known to His servants.”  The prophecy continues to be fulfilled not in the earthly, geographic city of modern-day Jerusalem but in the worldwide Church, the kingdom of God’s covenant people that stretches over all the earth.  This kingdom pushes back and defeats Satan wherever it flourishes; its members are safe and blessed as a child in his mother’s arms.  Not for nothing do we call the Church our “Mother.”

Possible response: Heavenly Father, thank You for keeping Your promise to restore and renew a home for Your people, all the way from the Garden of Eden and into eternity.

Psalm (Read Ps 66:1-7, 16, 20)

When we work through our lectionary readings, we certainly have cause for joy, don’t we?  If we comprehend how momentous it is that Jesus came to fulfill God’s promises of old and to build a secure kingdom that will stretch into eternity, we will want to join the psalmist and say, “Come and see the works of God, His tremendous deeds among the children of Adam.”  That is precisely what the seventy-two disciples experienced on their thrilling missionary journey.  Understanding this, we are quite ready to sing:  “Let all the earth cry out to God with joy.”

Possible response: The psalm is, itself, a response to our other readings.  Read it again prayerfully to make it your own.

Second Reading (Read Gal 6:14-18)

St. Paul shows us, from the inside, what it is like when men called by God to preach the Gospel live their vocation in the right way.  His “boasting” was not about himself and his authority.   His only boast was that, through the Cross, “the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.”  St. Paul didn’t care about success as men measure it.  He did not care about the “rules” of religion only for their own sake.  He knew that what matters is being “a new creation” in Christ, living in faithful obedience to the Lord.  The Galatian Christians had come under the influence of critics of St. Paul, who tried to convince them they must keep the ordinances of the Old Covenant, like circumcision, in order to be saved.  About them he says, “Let no one make troubles for me; for I bear the marks of Jesus on my body.”  In that day, slaves were “marked” to show possession by their owners.  St. Paul’s many physical persecutions had left “marks” on him.  They were living proof of his slavery to the Lord—just the kind of life we would expect of a name written in heaven.

Possible response: St. Paul, pray for us to live as you did—slaves of Christ, new creations in Him.

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Gayle Somers is a member of St. Thomas the Apostle parish in Phoenix and has been writing and leading parish Bible studies since 1996. She is the author of three bible studies, Galatians: A New Kind of Freedom Defended (Basilica Press), Genesis: God and His Creation, and Genesis: God and His Family (Emmaus Road Publishing). Her latest book, Whispers of Mary: What Twelve Old Testament Women Teach Us About Mary is available from Ascension Press. Gayle and her husband Gary reside in Phoenix and have three grown children.

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