Jesus Drew the Best Out of Ordinary People
The Jerusalem stockbrokers would not have been very interested in Jesus’ leadership team. They liked the way rabbis were picked from among the most promising.
They began with Jesus himself. “What good can come out of Nazareth?” Jesus had not recruited from the list of all-star prospects.
Jesus recruited ordinary people.
What’s more, they were so different from one another. The brokers would have been amazed that he only had one failure.
God’s record as a recruiter
If they thought of it, they probably would not have been impressed with God’s record, either.
Let’s just take a moment and go through a list of some of the unqualified and ordinary men and women God chose to work through to do the most unexpected things.
- Abraham and Sarah – an old couple past their prime who God used to build a nation. (Genesis 11-25)
- Moses – a stutterer who was God’s spokesman and leader. (Exodus 3-4)
- Jonah – the escapist who God brought back to save Nineveh. (Jonah 1-3)
- Peter – a quitter who God brought back to start the Kingdom. (Matthew 26, John 21, Acts 1-2)
- Paul – an enemy who became the greatest missionary in the New Testament. (Acts 7-9)
Jesus spent much of his time forming a team filled with a sense of common mission.
Jesus loved his recruits into a team
In the end, many literally gave their lives serving their mission to tell the “good news” about him.
Peter, Andrew, James, and John were ordinary fishermen trapped in a corrupt system as taxpayers to Rome. Matthew was outside their circle since he was an apostate Jew who collaborated with Roman oppressors. Simon, the Zealot, was noted for his militancy in all things. A strange gathering of individuals to entrust with his message of love.
The apostles were each deeply aware of his love for them. Only slowly did they realize his love for the marginalized and “throw-aways” of both Jewish and Roman society.
A transformation – from a group to a team.
Just when they thought they “got it,” they showed how little they understood the meaning of his death. In the powerful experiences after his Resurrection, they began to understand his message… Go, tell the good news of what you have experienced. The outpouring of Jesus’ Spirit transformed them into a team committed to a common goal. They joined together with the mission to be the good news they had experienced.
They became more than just a group of ordinary people. Together, they had a mission… to work together to welcome each other as missionaries and everyone else.
Implications for the church
As I look at our society and church, I often see the superficial awareness of others as strangers riding in the elevator we call earth. Our sense of being sisters and brothers seems limited to just our immediate blood relatives and those who are like us.
Pope Francis is using the synod to call us to wake up to the fact that we are each chosen and loved by God to be missionaries of his love.
Over and over, he reminds us of our mission, individually and collectively, to be signs of love even to our enemies.
We struggle, just as the first disciple of Jesus did, to understand its implications. In his call to journey together as Church, he encourages us to recognize and encounter the image of God in each other no matter how scarred.
Questions
- Do I recognize the love that Jesus has not only for me but for each, even the least of his brothers and sisters?
- What can I do to help me and them understand how Jesus loves them and calls them to his mission of “Good News”?
Originally posted on Vincentian Mindwalk
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