“But [Jesus] was silent and did not answer.”
Mark 14:61
Heinrich Suso was a Dominican holy man who lived in the
fourteenth century.[1] An itinerant preacher of the gospel,
Suso had acquired a far-reaching reputation for godliness. One day a scheming woman left her newly
born babe on the doorstep of Suso’s house and spread the rumor that he was the
father. Seemingly unphased by the
accusation, Heinrich took the child, caressed it, saying, “Dear child, I will
take care of you, for you are God’s child and therefore mine too. So long as God gives me a single
mouthful, I will share it with you to the glory of God; and I will bear
patiently whatever may happen to me on your account.”
Heinrich faced harsh criticism from all sides, even from his
own friends who were all too ready to point scornful fingers at him and mock
his reputation. He was ridiculed,
scorned and abandoned. Heinrich
withstood the accusations with serene silence, caring for the child with gentle
devotion. Not until the accusing
woman lay at death’s door did she confess that Heinrich was not the father.
Sometimes silence is the loudest answer.
Jesus too showed remarkable poise in the face of false
accusation, even if that led to his own death. The above passage marks one of the few occasions that Jesus’
only response to a question was silence. “Have you no answer?” shouted the chief priests.[2]
“Have you no answer?” Pilate
exclaimed.[3] Jesus was silent.
But why? He was
unjustly accused! An innocent
man! Why not stand up and declare
your righteousness? Point your
finger back at them! Jesus knew
His equality with God was not something to be grasped. His was a mission of servanthood,
humility and obedience. Inspiring
countless others throughout history, like Heinrich Suso, Jesus knew that only
God could right all the wrongs of a fallen humanity. Only God could heal our blindness and reveal His true nature
in the Suffering Servant.
A priest friend of mine recently reminded me that if you
want to follow Jesus, “you gotta look good on wood.” The reconciling work of God’s kingdom is far from easy. As quickly as you build bridges, there
will be those eager to tear them down.
Your work for unity will meet those who’d rather focus on the
divisions. Your commitment to
justice may earn you some real enemies and false friends.
The question is, how will you respond? Are you of the same mind as Christ
Jesus? Are you quick to defend
yourself or point the finger?
Would you be willing to sacrifice your own reputation (and perhaps your
own ego) for the sake of the gospel?
Are you ready to follow Jesus in all things, silently going about the
work of the kingdom?
People
are often unreasonable, illogical, and self-centered;
Forgive
them anyway.
If you
are kind, people may accuse you of selfish ulterior motives;
Be kind
anyway.
If you
are successful, you will win some false friends and some true enemies;
Succeed
anyway.
If you
are honest and frank, people may cheat you;
Be honest
and frank anyway.
What you
spend years building, someone could destroy overnight.
Build
anyway.
If you
find serenity and happiness, they may be jealous;
Be happy
anyway.
The good
you do today, people will often forget tomorrow;
Do good
anyway.
Give the
world the best you have, and it may never be enough;
Give the
best you've got anyway.
You see,
in the final analysis it is between you and God;
it was
never between you and them anyway.
~Mother Teresa
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Thanks so much for your input. I pray that this dialogue may be a blessing to you personally and to the ministry you exercise in Christ.
Michael