THE TASK: SERVE
April 18: Isaiah 61:1-3,6,8-9; Revelations 1: 5-8; Luke 4: 16-21
Maundy Thursday - the very name reminds us of the mandate we have from the Lord and Master, a mandate that is so compelling because it was not given merely in words, but in and through a life that was lived! All the three events we remember today have the same message in different forms!
THE LORD'S SUPPER:
The First event is the Lord's Supper...not so much what and how they did it, but what transpired in the mean time becomes the first mandate to us. It is the same with our families and communities too... not so much what we have at table and the variety of the spread that really matters, but what transpires around it. How many of us enjoy our table-time, in contrast to merely respecting time-table! The former concerns persons and the latter, programme.
Jesus uses the encounter at the table, not merely here, but with Zacchaeus, with Simon the Pharisee, with the disciples of Emmaus and so on, for a spiritual encounter, an encounter that would transform the life of the other. How many of our table encounters have ended up as spiritual enrichments? Here again he uses this table-time to bring a strong lesson to the disciples: LOVE IS SERVICE!
THE EUCHARIST:
The second event is Jesus giving us his body and blood... an anticipation of what is about to happen on Calvary. Jesus anticipates the blessing of the sanctifying act, the salvific self-giving in inviting his disciples to eat his body and drink his blood. What gruesome agony he underwent on those following days - all for the love that the Father has for us; all for the love that Christ wanted to manifest to us. Jesus infact exemplifies the mandate that he gave just a while back. The lesson is so clear: LOVE IS SELF-GIVING!
THE PRIESTHOOD:
The third event is the institution of the Priesthood... as the ministry of making present this mandate given and exemplified. Priesthood is a gift to the Church, a gift that makes present the mercy of God to God's people. It is a ministry that perpetuates the self emptying of God. The Son of man who came to serve and to be served, continues to minister to his beloved flock. Priesthood becomes thus a standing reminder to serve and offers a splendid lesson: LOVE IS LIVING FOR THE OTHER.
The task that is given to us is loud and clear: to serve! Being a Christ-ian is to serve and not to be served!
The task that is given to us is loud and clear: to serve! Being a Christ-ian is to serve and not to be served!