Matthew 10:34-39: Dividing Us
Sunday, August 20, 2023
God often speaks in sudden and surprising ways.
We know from life experience that fire has the potential to both destroy and heal, to either bring all to ash or to cauterize and cure. Jesus explains to his followers in today’s citation that when we say yes to his invitation what we agree to is our willing entrance into a life of hardship, tension, prophetic courage, and even rebellion. Yet as grim or as unhappy as this life might seem on the surface, a life in Christ shuns temporary pleasure in exchange for eternal joy.
To die to self in order to allow God to enter is the key to life in Christ. I have said to my close friends that a few years ago I realized that I was trying to manage my daily problems on my own, thinking that I need not bother God with things that seem so trivial in the light of the events reported on the evening news. Yet through my pain I came to understand that rather than fear the sensation of falling down a deep well backwards with no way to even guess if there were a bottom to this pit, and rather than scrabble with my hands at the sides of the well, what God was calling me to was a life in which I willingly pull my hands away from the sides of the well to cross them on my chest and to fall into the hands of God that then eased me down this frightening tube. After a time of free fall, I realized that the dreaded dark bottom of this well was opening into a flood of light. I also understood that my willingness to allow all that I am and all that I do to descend into what I could not see and could not predict gave me the gift of total and eternal sustenance. The waters I thought were waiting at the bottom of this well were, in fact, non-existent; for it is at the bottom of this well that I found God waiting.
Injury, crisis, strife, cataclysm, catastrophe, division, a fire that burns with a killing intensity. All of these, when faced with the love of Christ, disappear as dust to leave in their place a serenity that will always abide.
The fire that Christ brings can heal when we hand all back to God that we have been given, the gifts as well as the pain. The divisions we thought insurmountable have conjoined and fused in a blaze of Christ’s love to form a bond that can never be broken, a peace that can never be destroyed.
Adapted from a reflection written on June 17, 2009.
For more on the greening of the Iron Curtain zone, click on the images above, or visit: http://www.thebigroundtable.com/stories/boys-loved-birds/
![](https://thenoontimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/090807-berlinwall-hmed.jpg?w=300&h=160)
Tourists walk along the Wall at the former East German border in the village of Moedlareuth, about 300 kilometres (186 miles) south of Berlin, July 24, 2009. A tiny village of 50 residents straddling the former border dividing East and West Germany and nicknamed “Little Berlin” has preserved its own 100-metre section of the Iron Curtain — for tourists. Picture taken July 24, 2009. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch (GERMANY POLITICS ANNIVERSARY SOCIETY)
For another reflection on radical trust, visit the Falling Down the Well page on this blog.
For more about the Green Curtain, visit: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/iron-curtain-green-belt-park
Images from: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/iron-curtain-green-belt-park and https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna32329195
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