Monday, 23 July 2018

'Struth! ... Get Back in the Boat Boys!'



Maybe it's not the scene described by Mark, but beggars can't be choosers. Wikimedia Commons, Jesus Pacifies the Crowd, Etching by R. Stang after J.F. Overbeck.

In last Sunday’s Gospel reading, and leading into this coming Sunday’s Gospel[1], the Apostles return from their first missionary expedition filled with excitement at the success wrought by the invocation of the Name of Jesus. For Jesus had sent them out “two by two” into the surrounding towns and villages (6:7). Now we read that “the apostles returned to Jesus, and related to him all the things that they had done and taught.” (6:30).

It’s the same kind of enthusiasm we see in little children, who at the end of the day, after returning from a school excursion, are excited to tell everything that happened to them to their mum and dad. A good parent is attentive to the child’s sharing, and Jesus as Chief Shepherd was most assuredly attentive to the bleating of His chosen lambs—lambs whom He was forming at this time to be the shepherds of His future Church.

'Come... Rest A Little While'


In fact, Jesus was so attentive to His Apostles that He discerned their unspoken need to rest, to get away from the action of the apostolate for a little while, in order to recharge themselves in His Presence. “For many were coming and going, and they had no opportunity even to eat” (6:31a). So Jesus says to them, “You yourselves, come on own apart into a solitary place and rest a little while” (6:31b).

Here we see the need to space out the active works of the apostolate, and even the everyday duties and demands of family life and work, with moments of peaceful solitude, sometimes to rest, and other times to pray. The command “Come” speaks of the necessity of such withdrawal, and the adjective “little” used in the Greek and Peshitta speaks of the temporary and transitory nature of such ‘time away’ or ‘time apart’. Since the responsibilities of life await our return from the desert of leisure and contemplation.

At the word of Jesus, no doubt elated at this proposal (even if only to eat!) the Apostles jump into the boat, push out, and make their way “to a solitary place by themselves” (6:32).

How It went Down


Yet the people weren’t going to just give up that easily! Here’s Jesus the miracle worker—someone who teaches like nobody else; and here are His Apostles who have just spread the wildfire of His power throughout Judea, intensifying interest into the person of Jesus—ranging from the superficial to the sincere. The Gospel states that “many recognised” the place they were going to, and so the crowd ran ahead and bet the boat to the punch.

Some kind of place! Real solitary, Jesus. Out of all the places they could have gone, Jesus leads them to a place which many can guess at, and which is in the reach of the crowd who can simply get there quicker by foot! Even if this was the only nearby and reachable place we cannot forget about the fact that Jesus is no ordinary man. He is fully Divine, and so He knows exactly what He is leading them into, what the crowd was going to do, and what was expecting them on the other side—certainly not peaceful leisure!

The RSV reads, “As he [Jesus] went ashore he saw a great throng” (6:34). The Greek reads, “And having gone out he saw a great throng”. Thus arguably it is in the process of Jesus getting out of the boat that He visibly sees the approaching crowd. At this point His heart is touched and His divine compassion overwhelms His humanity, pricking all His senses and stirring His sensibilities, so that we read: “he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things.” (6:34). Later on, He then feeds them through the miracle of the multiplication.

 How It Could Have Gone Down


It’s not how the account goes but imagine if it went like this instead (forgive me in advance, but we’ll do it in Semi-Archaic Australian Message Translation style):

And as he got out of the boat Jesus saw the crowd, and He sighed a mighty sigh and spoke unto His twelve mates, “Struth! Check out that crowd! Get back in the boat boys, let’s get outta here!” And Jesus summersaulted back into the boat, and with His twelve made haste unto the opposite side of the body of water, where alighting they found a solitary place, good for relaxing, and He said, “Behold the serenity.” Then Jesus miracled-up some tucker, and having eateth, they chilled.

Quite a different scene, and mildly amusing (if I don’t say so myself). Yet how often have we not done exactly this! Row right off the shore of ‘Neighbour-in-Need’ to the opposite bank where we feel free of the expectation to help.

To Step Ashore, Or Not to Step Ashore?


Perhaps, we’ve made our plans to spend a day or a bit of time in rest or for prayer, stepping back from the hustle and bustle of the demands of our state of life. Maybe our plans haven’t even been set in motion; or else we may have just settled down to relax, to read, to watch something, or are half-way through meditating or writing, or are in the midst of what we think is a profound spiritual moment of contemplation.

Until suddenly, a knock, a voice, an intruder, a serpent is in our Eden! In the words of Everybody Loves Raymond, “They’re coming!” An unexpected spanner is thrown into our works. Phone calls are rarely urgent, thus can hardly interpose. And there are occasions when temporary avoidance is justified and needed when the place we live in is a hot spot for visitors and is transparently available practically 24/7, and would have no boundaries unless we drew the line in the sand. But generally, most of the time, and for most of us who do not live in such a ministry-hot-spot, a person in the flesh, be it a guest at our house, a stranger walking up to us in the park, or a near-one summoning us from our domestic cacoon, they can seem to jam into our midst—really needing our assistance and attention, and above all, our time.

(The same can apply to when we’re set on any agenda—be it during work or study—when someone pops into the scene unexpectantly, we may even feel, unwantingly! But for the sake of simplicity we’ll stick to ‘unwelcome’ intermissions into our prayer and rest).

So what do we do? Do we act rude and brief, making it clear we’d rather they get going so that we can chill or pray or do our thing? Or do we act like Jesus and take compassion on them. Acting normal and natural, hospitable and friendly, responding in love in accord with the situation and the need of the one to whom we’re speaking. Maybe a simple cup of tea is in order. A glass of water. A quick conversation. A heartfelt hello, instead of an avoidance or a weak-hello, out of fear they’ll keep us talking for eternity. Above all, maybe all that’s required is keen interest and an open ear. Sure, we needn’t sacrifice the whole day to them, or even that long at all—and sometimes we have to gently pull ourselves from those who would demand our attention until the Second Coming or until we dropped dead, unless we intervened. But this is a far cry from pushing someone into the lake or sea and rowing away, or of hiding under the nets on the boat in order to avoid them when they’ve already seen us!

Or perhaps we’re in the middle of a spiritual retreat, enjoying the bliss of present and future solitude, only to have someone rock-up or knock at the door, or have someone from outside the retreat start speaking to us. Or else, we’re in church or Eucharistic Adoration and someone who is completely oblivious to the customs starts talking with us or looking around for human contact.

What do we do? Do we ignore them? Look away and wrap ourselves inside the cloak of our piety? Do we speak hastily with them? Curt and to the point, making it clear we’re on retreat? Do we point to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament and tell them to be quiet because the God of Love wants them to shut-up? (Try convincing someone about the God of Love with that blunt tactic). Or do we put the focus on love and discern in that instance if love is summoning us to drop the ideal of a retreat or the strict practice of silence and instead to take compassion on this person who is Jesus coming to us?

To be like Jesus in going forth from the boat, we might then have to momentarily drop our silence, prayers and devotions, in order to tend to this fellow sheep of the flock who is likely sincerely ignorant and/or broken and in need. It might be as simple as giving them a smile, a nod of the head or a greeting. We might have to step aside and see how we can help. We might ask who they are, or explain what Adoration is all about. The situation and how we are to best respond will be given to us by means of the gifts of the Spirit working in us. Responding to the Spirit in such circumstances could be the kind of action that changes someone’s life. Yet it wouldn’t happen if we stuck to our little boat of ridged idealism. We wouldn’t after all like to be like the pious little Priest and Levite who both hurried along, possibly to the Temple, making sure to avoid the man in need so as not to be inconvenienced, ‘ritually defiled,’ or maybe even out of fear of being judged by their peers who might have misjudged their absence for impiety.

Ignorance and Availability


Sometimes however the equivalent of the mighty throng running down the beach towards our intended sanctuary is not something the other party is even aware of. Sometimes only we’re aware of the opportunity and summons presented before us to reach out towards our neighbour who has no idea.

Take for example the crowd who were gathered around Jesus and the Apostles. Jesus knew the crowd was going to assail them at the alleged ‘solitary place’. Yet He went forward and made His way with the Apostles to a situation He knew was going to involve more effort, more time, more love. He thus made the choice to make Himself available to the crowd by heading for that ‘doomed location’ even though He could have gotten away with the bother by sailing off somewhere else. After all, the crowd didn’t know that Jesus knew that they were going to intercept Him. Jesus could have therefore exploited their ignorance and used it to His advantage. So why didn’t He? Because He saw a need, and a vital need that had to be addressed not later, but in the present.

By this, Jesus is teaching us that even in those situations when our neighbours are ignorant of the fact we can help them, and therefore do not expect our aid, this does not negate the duty to tend to a need and compromise on rest if indeed the need cannot wait. This is not something that needs clarification, because in our hearts we all know the difference between a neighbourly need to which God is prompting us to cater to in the moment, compared to a need that can easily wait an hour or a day.

Then there’s the matter of availability. Before Jesus even started having some down time He made Himself available right until the last minute, dropping the plan to rest immediately when He saw a need, and delaying it until later (as we shall see). Likewise, while we are engaged in essential rest or prayer it is appropriate to mitigate our availability somewhat, delaying what can be delayed. Yet we mustn’t forgo serving our neighbour simply on the basis that we plan to rest and pray soon enough. Maybe God is asking us to delay our plans. Maybe not. But availability leaves us open to discern and act upon God’s Will, not insist upon our own as if it were Divine Will. Nor must we confuse designated time for prayer and essential rest with our general available time. It is easy to brush off charity under the pretext of sacred time alone and essential rest, when really we’re just using that as an excuse to avoid something we feel is bothersome.

A Shepherd of Body and Soul


As we have said, obviously Jesus was no dummy. He could have found and arranged a full-proof solitary place if He wanted to. Yet in that moment when the crowd hemmed upon them, Jesus made the conscious decision to go to a place where He knew the needy crowd would await Him. Is He playing games here? Toying with His Apostles? Saying, “Come let’s rest,” but really, He’s setting the Apostles up for round seventy-seven of Ministry Non-Stop?

No, what Jesus is doing is sincerely exercising care for the Apostles’ bodily and spiritual needs. He wants them to find rest and to be able to take a little break. But Jesus also wants to teach His Apostles an important spiritual teaching. He is forming them after all to be shepherds of His flock, and the life of ministry—be it priestly ministry or even the ministry of a religious or lay person—is never going to go exactly as planned according to the ideal schedule we have in mind. Things are going to come up. Charity is going to barge its way into our sanctuary, step all over our nice little plans, and demand our attention like a baby crying from its cot in the middle of the night. Jesus is thus shepherding more than the crowd here, He is also shepherding His Apostles—and by extension, us by example.

Anyway, before we charge Jesus with playing games we must keep in mind that Jesus does grant them time apart to finally be at rest (6:45-46). Thus Jesus “dismissed the crowd” (6:45). But before this Jesus first teaches the crowd, nourishing their souls with the Word, the Bread of Heaven, and then He feeds their bodies with earthly bread, through the miracle of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes.

By this two things are made apparent: the first is that the order of the ‘feedings’ reveals that spiritual nourishment, and the soul, is more important than physical nourishment and the needs of the body; and secondly, that the body and soul are one, and so it is that love in this life must cater to the soul, but also to the body. The spiritual and corporeal works of mercy are thus inseparable, but the latter derives its power from the former—the Spirit of prayerful love that animates it. This symbiotic relation and precedence of the spiritual is summarised in the well-known Scripture: “man does not live by bread alone; but man lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the Lord” (Deut 8:3).

Practically speaking the example of our Lord who feeds both soul and body requires us in our hospitality and service, to tend to the needs of our neighbour physically and spiritually. Seeking as it were to keep them comfortable, and to uplift their spirit with the joy of Christ manifested naturally without weird pretence, and to edify them by our kindness. Offering them both spiritual bread and physical bread, as it were. Praying for them and also doing what we can to help them concretely. As the Spirit so exhorts us through St. John: “Little children, let us not love in word or speech but in deed and truth.” (1 Jn 3:18). That is, in deeds soaked in prayer, for prayer awakens and unveils the truth that Jesus the Good Shepherd is at work in the outward acts we do.

'Restful Waters By'


Besides all of this, Jesus is not leading His Apostles into a trap of business, "besides restless waters," as if His summons to “Come… rest a little while” was a lie or something simply to be granted later on, possibly implying that literal rest and solitude for prayer is not that important. But Jesus is imparting the lesson that true rest, peace and nourishment, comes not from satisfying our own will to finally chillax or pray, but from doing and abiding in God’s Will, cooperating with whatever God is calling us to do in the present situation—even and especially if it embraces the Cross and wearies one to the core, and intercepts our lovely agenda.

Hence our Lord says, “My peace I give you… not as the world gives” (Jn 14:27)—since this peace comes through grace not by works, for even attempts to chill cannot conjure such true peace. And elsewhere, “My food is to do the will of the one who sent me” (Jn 4:34). For peace is the fruit of doing God’s Will. A fruit we feast upon through yielding to It. In fact the restful waters spoken of by the Psalmist— “He makes me to lie down in green pastures, besides the restful waters” (Ps 23:2)—is the Will of God to which Jesus the Good Shepherd leads us to rest in interior solitude, and to feast in the Spirit upon the pasture of the Divine Peace, even if exteriorly things are far from the ideal of ‘peace and quiet’. And so we read, that “He restores my soul… He prepares before me a furnished table in the presence of my foes” (Ps 23:3,5)—an allusion to that spiritual feast of interior peace decked out upon the table of our faith, which can be enjoyed even in the midst of outward disturbance and restless thoughts. Indeed, it is nothing less than a spiritual communion.

The Dismissal


Finally, after compromising on an initial vocalised plan (since Jesus’ plan was this all along…), and tending to the spiritual and physical needs of His guests, we read the following, translated directly from the Greek:

Immediately he compelled his disciples to enter into the boat and to go before him to the other side, to Bethsaida, until he himself dismissed the crowd. And having taken leave of them, he departed into the mountain to pray. (6:45-46).

Let’s have a quick look at some of the key words used here.

εὐθὺς – ‘Immediately’

After Jesus had exercised the charity which the occasion required He “immediately” told His Apostles (at least—the word used is “disciples” and so there could have been more) to get out of there and to find some literal peace and quiet. The adverb “immediately” (εὐθὺς) reveals how important Jesus deemed such time for rest. He doesn’t hesitate, thus teaching us that when the duty to our neighbour has been served, and our original plan to rest and/or pray can now be actualised, we ought to get right back to it. Not resentful of the ‘interruption,’ but nourished by the grace of the encounter.

ἠνάγκασεν – ‘He Insisted Upon the Necessity’

It then says that “he compelled” (ἠνάγκασεν) or even more literally, “he made fully necessary” or “he insisted upon the necessity”—that His disciples get back into the boat and go away “to the other side” and rest “a little while”. This is strong language. He knows they’re tired, in need of some time apart to regain their physical and emotional strength, and to rekindle their spiritual fervour. So after the mission at hand is accomplished He practically forces them into the boat, maybe even shuffling them off into the boat Himself, and at least gesturing to make like a banana and split. Here Jesus warns us against a kind of activism, spiritual or otherwise, to which the Christian may slip into, as if to be a good Christian is to be constantly on the go without spending time in prayer, quiet fellowship with intimates, and little bouts of restful leisure. Jesus tells us every now and then, especially if we’re getting too busy and neglecting prayer above all: “Get back into the boat of making yourself available to God, and rest a little while.” We need grace to recharge our souls, and slices of time to restore our minds and bodies to their usefulness.

ἑως ‘Until’

We also see that Jesus hangs back to finish-up. This reveals to us that no matter what there’s only so much we can do, and even when we do our utmost, it’s Jesus who must complete and bring our works of charity to their perfection. We must adopt the posture of surrendering to Jesus our works of love, and the intentions we might have to do more for the person we’ve just ministered to. We must also make a prayerful act of surrender, offering up the encounter we’ve just had, and that person, instead of simply running back into our tortoise shell. There’s a reason that intermission took place and by offering it up in prayer we give permission to Jesus to perfect it, make it His own, and work more deeply in that person’s life. In this way we do not waste the opportunities we have, nor leave them unfinished in imperfection—but we allow Jesus to reign as King Shepherd in the various shores of our encounters.

αὐτὸς ἀπολύει τὸν ὀχλον ‘He Himself Dismissed the Crowd’

Finally, we see that after Jesus does what He has to do, He “dismissed the crowd”. He has no scruples or guilt about sending them away when the Will of the Father has been accomplished in this circumstance. He hasn’t neglected His sheep, He has fed them, and loved them. But He is a man and He needs to recuperate, to pray and rest. And so He dismisses the crowd—a crowd who would never leave if He didn’t initiate it.

Here we learn the lesson that it’s okay to ‘dismiss the crowd’ when we’ve done our duty and loved in accord with what the Lord was asking of us. It’s wrong to dismiss the crowd too early—and this is perhaps the most common error, caused by an attachment to our own will and agenda, instead of an open discernment to the Spirit. Yet on the opposite extreme, it’s imprudent and unwise to never dismiss the crowd, or to do so much too late.

However, most of the time we don’t have to do any dismissing—the situation works itself out. But sometimes we do have to encourage the other party to move on. There are so many ways of doing so, and we can do so with sensitivity. Only rarely do we have to be a bit more blunt, such as if the other party is like a pool ball incapable of taking every cue we put their way.

ἀποταξάμενος αὐτοῖς, ἀπηλθεν – ‘Having Taken Leave of Them, He Departed’

At last, after all is said and done, Jesus himself departs and prays in solitude by Himself on a mountain. This reinforces everything we have spoken about. “For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven” (Ecc 3:1): a time to rest, a time to pray in peace; and a time to work, a time to serve such peace.




[1] Week’s 16 and 17 respectively, Year B.