The Hard, Good Road
Today’s gospel is the third of three incidents that Mark shares where Jesus tells his disciples about his impending suffering, crucifixion and resurrection. You’ll recall the other two; Peter’s confession followed with “Get behind me Satan,” and after the second time the disciples argue amongst themselves about who is greatest.
Jesus again tells them in verses 10:32-34 what is to come. This time, it is the brothers James and John. Mark tells us (in Chapter 3) that Jesus calls them “Sons of Thunder.” That tells us they were loud, boisterous types.
There are two primary lessons to learn from this passage.
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Unbuckling Our Packs and Lightening Our Loads
It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.
One of the highlights of my summer, and indeed, of my entire life, was going on a weeklong backpack adventure, up and down the hills of West Virginia along the Allegheny Trail, with my son, because it gave each of us the opportunity to come to know each other better as grown men, and at sixty-nine years of age, I don’t have any time to lose.
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Hardness of heart is a treatable disease.
Hardness of heart: that’s the universal human ailment that Jesus came to treat and to heal by giving us a new heart. Jesus reminds the Pharisees that the best Moses could do was to make an allowance for divorce for those who suffered from hardness of heart. Jesus’ fellow Jews were of two minds on how hard a person’s heart had to be before divorce could be allowed under the law of Moses. For some, any amount of hardness of heart, even minor irritations, was enough to justify divorce. For others, infidelity, physical or emotional cruelty, or the welfare of the children were substantial and legitimate grounds for divorce. Jesus himself, according to St. Matthew’s version of today’s gospel, permitted divorce in the case of adultery, though even there, I would claim, Jesus never meant to imply that in the ultimate betrayal of adultery, God’s grace was incapable of healing such a destructive case of hardness of heart.
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