Colour
Supplement
Articles
by Christians around the world
Sunday
September 24 2006
Seeing
things
by
Mary Hinkle Shore
"Start seeing
motorcycles," said the bumper sticker. I didn't
know I wasn't seeing motorcycles, I
thought, then realized that that was the point.
How do you begin to see something you didn't
know you were missing?
"Start seeing the resurrection," says Jesus, as
he walks with the disciples to Jerusalem. He is
teaching them about his death and resurrection,
but they don't understand. They are confused and
reluctant to ask for clarification. Perhaps
they're afraid of looking stupid again. After
all, the last time they thought they understood
what Jesus was talking about, he was warning
them about the Pharisees and Herod, and they
were thinking about bread (Mark 8:14-21). Oops.
Or maybe they are frightened into silence by the
words betrayed and killed.
Whatever the cause of their fear, they do not
respond to Jesus when he describes the end of
their journey.
Instead, as the walk progresses, the disciples
find their way into a discussion about which of
them is the greatest. They are graduate students
comparing GRE scores. They are ministers
discussing how many they worship each week, as
in "We worship about 450 at both services." They
are anyone who has ever written a memo
containing the words "measurable outcomes."
Which of the disciples is the star pupil? Who is
the greatest?
It is easy to portray the disciples as
self-involved here, but maybe that is unfair.
What if the outcome they were trying to measure
was faithfulness to their teacher? What if they
were arguing about who really understood Jesus,
including what Jesus was saying about his death?
We know they were confused by his passion
predictions. We know, too, that they are not the
only followers to wonder what exactly is
required of one who seeks to remain faithful to
Jesus. Maybe the conversation about greatness
grew out of a conversation about what it really
meant for them to stay beside Jesus all the way
to Jerusalem.
The way of the cross is no less confounding or
frightening today. Because of this, it is
fashionable in some circles to speak of
Christianity as a set of skills that one learns
to practice, the way one learns the skills
necessary to be a woodworker or a research
chemist. New pastors are advised to find the
masters of Christianity in their parish and
apprentice themselves to these giants of
Christian practice. And if we are going to
apprentice ourselves to a master, we must learn
who is the greatest.
Which brings us back to the disciples on the
road. Unfortunately, inside the house in
Capernaum, Jesus is unimpressed by the
disciples' tidy argument about their need to
know who is the greatest. He looks around for
help to make his point. He sits down, calls his
pupils to sit around him and begins to teach by
bringing a child into the group. We don't know
if the child was a girl or a boy. (The Greek
word for child is gender neutral.) The
vocabulary echoes the culture's view of
children. To almost all adults, and certainly to
adult male disciples focused on their alpha male
teacher and their measurable likeness to him,
children were of no consequence. Children were
invisible.
In Luke 7, a Pharisee is scandalized when Jesus
allows a woman, a known sinner, to wash his feet
and anoint them with ointment. Jesus asks him,
"Do you see this woman?" Something similar is
happening when Jesus stands a child up in the
midst of his disciples, then takes the child in
his arms the way Simeon had once embraced baby
Jesus and says, "Whoever welcomes one such child
in my name welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me
welcomes not me, but the one who sent me" (Mark
9:37). The disciples want to know who is the
best at following Jesus, and Jesus says, "Do you
see this child?" As Pheme Perkins observes,
"This example treats the child, who was socially
invisible, as the stand-in for Jesus."
In one of Sue Grafton's mysteries, the murderer
turns out to be a 60-year-old woman who is 30
pounds overweight. After the mystery is solved,
the detective reflects that the woman nearly got
away with murder simply because no one would
remember seeing someone like her. Nothing about
her made her noticeable. She was, for all
practical purposes, invisible.
So it was with a child in antiquity. Jesus sees
something the disciples do not even know they
are missing.
This gospel text's bumper sticker might be,
"Start seeing the invisible." Start seeing the
invisible, not because it is virtuous to do so,
not so that we can congratulate ourselves on
being the greatest at seeing. Start seeing the
invisible because to receive the invisible One
is to receive Jesus, and to receive Jesus is to
receive the One who sent him.
Where is the invisible Jesus who will teach you
the way of the cross? Will you learn to pray
from the "masters," the saints in your
community, the old faithful ones? Probably you
will. But there is also that panicked woman in
the ICU waiting room who has never prayed, and
who teaches you to pray when she clenches her
hands to her forehead and says, "God, please!"
Do you see her?
You may learn to preach from the tapes of great
preachers, and refine your theology by reading
the writings of seminary professors. But a
teenager near you could be a preacher too, one
with a talent for testimony that you've never
seen. The most solid sacramental theology you
hear this week may come from the five-year-old
who tells you she thinks she is ready to receive
communion because, simply, "I can eat." If you
see them, you see Jesus.
Mary Hinkle Shore is
associate professor of New Testament at Luther
Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Copyright
2006 CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission
from the September 06 2006 issue of the CHRISTIAN
CENTURY. Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O.
Box 378, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097.
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