This Sunday’s Gospel (Mt 10:26-33) presents the heart of Jesus’ missionary discourse. A mission that consists of a difficult and counter-current proclamation, which causes divisions and in many cases even misunderstandings and persecutions. For Jesus invites us to reveal the hidden plots of power; the conspiratorial designs of those who have no interest in the common good; or the subtle games of alliances in the name of a peace that in reality only masks the interests of groups. This is the proclamation that Jesus gives to missionaries, along with the social responsibility to heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons (Mt 10:8). If we interpret these categories of people socially and not only spiritually or morally, we find the rejected of society: those contaminated by the capitalist system; the desperate; the diverse; those affected by the many psychological disorders that affect us today. The gospel of the Kingdom, therefore, is about transforming human, social and ecological situations, which are the product of a sick society, unable to guarantee a healthy and wholesome life for all.
Silence, stillness, passive waiting or the attitude of those who neither see nor hear, are not Christian virtues. They are sins of omission. Nor should we place too much trust in certain practices of piety that are too intimate and individualistic, or in a certain “respectability” that is interested in maintaining the status quo, and incapable of engaging in the transformation of social relations, politics and injustices. We live in the time of prophecy, we feel the need for someone to raise their voice and hold up the banner of the common good, without fear of the consequences to come. Like Jeremiah, the prophet who, despite bearing the consequences of his proclamation on his skin, does not back down, but hardens his face and courageously continues his mission.
“Do not be afraid” – Jesus says – “even the very hairs of your head are all numbered (…), you are worth more than many sparrows”.
Luigi Shiavo, Biblicist