Trust, in God, do we?
February 16, 2025: 6th Sunday in Ordinary time
Jeremiah 17: 5-8; 1 Corinthians 15: 12, 16-20; Luke 6: 17, 20-26
One of the first questions to be answered here is, what does 'trusting' mean? Trust is the
firm belief in the reliability, truth, or ability of someone or something! When
I say I trust, I know that the person or the thing, is capable of something
that is in reference. To trust, therefore is to know. To trust is to use that
knowledge to rely on that someone or something. To trust is however not totally
foolproof. Because trusting is a leap that one takes from what one knows about
someone, to a judgement about what that someone is. The knowledge one has can
be deceptive, or purposely created and shared to deceive. Remember the episode
of Adam and Eve with the serpent... they trusted the serpent! That is why the
whole idea of who is trust-worthy and who is not, arises.
Here comes the second question, what
does it mean, when I say, I trust in God. It means that I know
God, I have gotten to know God, I have my convictions about God, I have a
relationship with God as a result of knowing God. Can I say, 'O God, in you I
trust', without really knowing God? Can I claim to trust in God, without really
developing a true relationship in God? Do I really trust in God or do I trust
in what I have created for myself as trust-worthy gods? May be riches, may be
power or position or dominion over the other, may be the pleasures of life, may
be my ego, may be the opinions of the world, may be the false image that I wish
to give the world about myself... anyone of these I could create for myself as
my trust-worthy deity.
The question that remains to be answered is, do I really trust in God? Or am I using
God for my own purposes - pacifying myself, justifying myself, satisfying
myself, fending for myself and reaching my own ends! The world today teaches
this generation to look at the what is here and now, to consider the facts and
concrete reality as seen, to value statistics and believe in calculated
precisions. In the name of science, certain knowledge is created and spread and
everyone is directly or indirectly obliged to accept it, submit to it and act
on it. What is 'spiritual' is considered unreal, what is 'theological' is
considered unscientific, and what is 'transcendental' is considered a waste of
time. To add to the predicament, there are those who misinterpret the
'spiritual', manipulate the 'theological' and manoeuvre the 'transcendental' to
suit their own ends. As St. Paul says to the Corinthians in the second reading
today, these are the 'most unfortunate of all people' and not only that - the
most dangerous of all, misleading everyone.
The contrast that repeats itself in the first reading and the Gospel - the
blessed and the cursed - consists in trusting truly in God or trusting in the
gods that we create for ourselves!
The worst of the possibilities is that we intentionally create deities for
ourselves and for others around and make people trust in them. As the society
today creates success, popularity and comfort as deities and propose to people
to chase after, for the sake of happiness and meaning in life! It is enough a
person is successful and moneyed, whatever he or she says becomes trust-worthy,
today. Look at some bigwigs who control the entire governments and their policies,
just because they have the money and might! In the past we have seen too, the
moneyed controlling the world… and where it led to! Where is the trust of the
world placed?
Another possibility is that we are mistaken in our understanding, and
conceive God in a manner much limited and wrong. Some so-called preachers who
delight in making fancy predictions and frightening propositions, make people
fall for this and there are persons who trust in some rites, rituals and rules
as those which can really save them from all pain and suffering in life. What a
deception it can cause when they really get to know the Truth!
The only possibility that can do us eternal good is to earnestly pray with the psalmist today: happy is the one who trusts in the Lord. In God should we trust... in God alone, in God who is Love, Truth and Goodness. Only in love, should we trust, not in hatred and vengeance, not in proving one's point and winning over all others. Only in Truth should we trust, not in half-truths and fancy ideas, not in the deceptions of the evil one. Only in Goodness should we trust, not in craftiness and deceit, not in manipulations and exploitation.
Only in God should we trust, for in God lies our eternal salvation. We are called to resurrection, to eternal life, to that salvation... which cannot be made sense of, except in relation to God. May our everyday life choices and priorities show to ourselves, that only IN GOD WE TRUST.