In today’s Gospel, Mark 2: 18-22, St. Mark reminds us that no one “pours
new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the wine will burst the skins, and both
the wine and the skins are ruined.” Jesus
makes us the “new wineskins” into which is poured forth redemptive graces that
stretch us to love as He loved, to reach beyond the boundaries of race and
creed, as He did and does. By His death and resurrection, we have the hope that, one day, we shall overcome our hatreds and stop pouring new wine in old wineskins that result in explosions of violence in our streets and neighborhoods.
Today is a public holiday in many U.S. States in honor of
Martin Luther King,Jr., who invited us to stretch beyond the boundaries of race.
Martin Luther King, Jr., challenged us to embrace all men and women as equals, no
matter what color their skin. He challenged us to treat Blacks as men and women
deserving of our utmost respect and owed certain inalienable rights as human
beings, rights that were denied them for
many centuries and, in many ways, continue to be denied them today.
Treating people the way the Blacks and Native Americans and so many
other so-called minorities have and are treated in our society is a disgrace to the human race, as
disgraceful to us as Jesus’ crucifixion was to so many people of His day. Jesus suffered as any human being suffers and
continues to “offer prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears to the
one who was able to save him from death” (cf today’s first reading, Hebrews 5: 1-10). Let each one of us today “offer prayers and
supplications with loud cries and tears to the one who …[is] able to save us”
from our prejudices, our hatreds, and the divisions of race and creed, rich and
poor, female and male, sick and well.
Am I allowing myself to be stretched beyond the boundaries
of race and creed or beyond any of my prejudices or the divisions I may have
created? Am I allowing redemptive
graces to stretch my way of thinking and acting that deny others their basic
human rights? Do my actions reveal my
belief that all persons, no matter the color of their skin or their social
status are sons and daughters of the Most High,
who, with me, have been ransomed from slavery to sin and made heirs of the
eternal kingdom?
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