Skip to main content

Take Nothing for the Journey


Take Nothing for the Journey
Mk 6: 7 -13
15th Sunday in Ordinary Time

In today’s Gospel, Mark narrates to us how Jesus sent his disciples on a mission, giving them specific instructions on how they were to conduct themselves during the course of their work as missionaries.  
The Gospel begins with Jesus summoning the twelve. Apparently, as Mark puts it at the end of this reading, Jesus intends to send the twelve off with the objective of preaching repentance, driving out evil spirits and healing the sick and the infirmed. It was to be a mission of mercy and a call to repentance. But before sending them off, Jesus gives them some instructions on how to go about the mission.
First of all, Jesus sends them off two by two. They were not to be alone. Mission is meant to be a collective and not a solitary pursuit. He then instructs them to take nothing for the journey except a walking stick. A walking stick would have instilled in them the idea that the mission was to be a journey, a constant moving from one place to another.
Then Jesus elaborates further his instruction to them to take nothing for the journey; they were to take no food, no sack, no money in their belts.  He even instructs them what to wear; they were to wear sandals but not a second tunic. A tunic was an upper garment that was a common apparel in those days. This meant that they were not to worry about basic and important provisions like food and clothing.  Their focus was to be the mission itself and not so much their personal necessities.
He also gives them instructions regarding their accommodations, saying: “ wherever you enter a house, stay there until you leave.” This means that people who welcome them into their homes become collaborators in the mission and become partakers in the work of the disciples.
Jesus also instructs them regarding people who reject them. To this Jesus says: “ Whatever place does not welcome you or listen to you, leave there and shake the dust off your feet in testimony against them.” They were not to waste time staying with people who don’t welcome their message.
“Shaking the dust off the feet” was to become a symbolic gesture of leaving a place that rejected the disciple. At the same time, it was also meant to be a gesture that signaled to the disciple that it was time to "move on." Disciples need not harbor ill feelings against people who have rejected them. There is to be no emotional baggage even for the disciple. 
The work of preaching repentance and of healing and casting out demons is the work of our Lord Jesus Christ. In this reading we see him somehow empowering the disciples to do the same. But more than simply giving and enabling them to do the same work, he also gives them instructions that would help them develop the same mindset as his.
They were to make themselves free from whatever concerns they had  regarding basic provisions. They were to free themselves from whatever emotional baggage the mission may bring. Their ability to do the work of Jesus depended largely on their willingness to subordinate material, physical and even emotional concerns to the task of preaching God’s kingdom.
Jesus himself was to be their example. He did not concern himself over anything; not food, not shelter, not even his clothes; not even the rejection he suffered from his own native place. He was just concerned about preaching the Kingdom, doing the Father’s will. 
The power of the mission lies not in the resources we have but on the sole dependence we have on Jesus who sends us. When Jesus sends us, he empowers us with what we need. He takes care of our provisions. He supports us even in times of rejection and gives us the strength to move on in difficult times.
As Christians, we are all called by Jesus to do his work. We are all called and sent in his name while traveling through life, taking care of our families, encountering different people in all walks of life.
But the work of Jesus in and through us becomes ineffective and weak especially when we refuse to free ourselves from all the concerns that hinder his power working in and through us.
Free yourself from all the baggage that life may bring. Remember Jesus telling us: “ take nothing for the journey.”  Amen.


“ For you know the generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich. “  - 2 Corinthians 8: 6




Comments

  1. The challenge is to relieve ourselves of any impediment, to trust in the Lord for His provisions, and to do his will/mission. An amazing way to achieve our purpose in life!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Do not worry on material things just focus on the mission and what God wants us to do. God will provide all that we need.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Ash Wednesday

#DAYLIGHT – Daily #MenOfLight #GospelReflection February 26, 2020 Ash Wednesday Gospel: Mt 6: 1 – 6, 16 – 18 Sharer: Bro. Mike Lapid +++++++++++++++++++++++ Gospel “Beware of practicing your piety before others in order to be seen by them; for then you have no reward from your Father in heaven. 2  “So whenever you give alms, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be praised by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. 3  But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, 4  so that your alms may be done in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you. 5  “And whenever you pray, do not be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, so that they may be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. 6  But whenev...

Words of Eternal Life

  Words of Eternal Life Jn 6: 60 – 69 21sth Sunday in Ordinary Time  Introduction For the past three Sundays, our readings have been about Jesus who revealed himself to the crowd as the bread come down from heaven. Today’s reading, however, reveals the negative reactions of the crowd regarding this revelation with some of them deciding not to follow Jesus anymore. Our Gospel begins with many of Jesus’ disciples saying: “ This saying is hard, who can accept it.”   They were referring to what Jesus has said; that he is the bread come down from heaven; that this bread is his own flesh; and that his flesh is real food, his blood real drink; that anyone who eats of his flesh and drinks his blood will know no hunger or thirst but will have eternal life. The full revelation of Jesus as bread come down from heaven seemed too difficult to accept for Jesus’ disciples who, for all this time, have followed him closely as he taught and moved...

Remember Me Jesus

Remember Me Jesus Lk 22: 14 – 23: 56 Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord Introduction At today’s Passion Sunday reading, we hear of Jesus’ crucifixion according to the gospel of Luke. For most of Luke’s account, the crucified Jesus is jeered and mocked by everyone except for one of the criminals who was crucified with him who recognized him as king and savior.   The Gospel Today’s reading is taken from Luke who presents to us his version of the crucifixion narrative. Here, we find Jesus crucified with criminals, one on his right, the other on his left. In Luke’s narrative, we see a Jesus, who despite being jeered and mocked at, prays for the crowd’s forgiveness because “they did not know what they were doing.” Luke also presents the extent of the mockery on Jesus. First they divided his garments by casting lots. Second, the rulers who were there, sneered at him and said: “ He saved others, let him save himself if he is the chosen one, the Chr...