I grew up listening to the music of the 1960s and 1970s. The large size of an LP record sleeve is a great vehicle for artwork, and photography in particular. The shots are often in soft focus, giving the subjects a gentle dreamlike quality. It can be easy to think that the whole of Our Lord’s ministry was gentle and easy, especially because of how it is shown in Victorian religious art. However, today’s Gospel shows us that this was not always the case. As the passage begins there are so many people gathered around Jesus that He and His disciples are not even able to eat. People are desperate to hear what He has to say, they are desperate for healing. While their need is great, without rest and refreshment, there is no way that Christ can minister to them effectively in the long term without taking care of himself.
We can have a lot of sympathy for Our Lord’s family, who are genuinely concerned for His wellbeing and that of His friends. They want to take care of His physical needs, as Jesus seems to be prioritising God’s people over Himself.
The religious authorities, however, have a completely different understanding of what is going on:
‘And the scribes who came down from Jerusalem were saying, “He is possessed by Beelzebul,” and “by the prince of demons he casts out the demons.”’
‘A’r ysgrifenyddion hefyd, a oedd wedi dod i lawr o Jerwsalem, yr oeddent hwythau’n dweud, “Y mae Beelsebwl ynddo”, a, “Trwy bennaeth y cythreuliaid y mae’n bwrw allan gythreuliaid.”’ (Mk 3:22)
The scribes understand the actions of this charismatic healer and teacher from Galilee as being the result of demonic possession. This is another way of saying, ‘Jesus is a fraud’ and ‘This isn’t the work of God’. Their attempt to write Christ off not only flies in the face of the evidence, but also does not follow through logically. Jesus challenges them saying:
“How can Satan cast out Satan? If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house is divided against itself, that house will not be able to stand. And if Satan has risen up against himself and is divided, he cannot stand, but is coming to an end.”
“Pa fodd y gall Satan fwrw allan Satan? Os bydd teyrnas yn ymrannu yn ei herbyn ei hun, ni all y deyrnas honno sefyll. Ac os bydd tŷ yn ymrannu yn ei erbyn ei hun, ni all y tŷ hwnnw sefyll. Ac os yw Satan wedi codi yn ei erbyn ei hun ac ymrannu, ni all yntau sefyll; y mae ar ben arno.”(Mk 3:23-26)
If Jesus is possessed by the Devil, how can He cast the Devil out? His accusers have failed to see the spirit of God, the Holy Spirit, at work in Christ. The scribes refusal to see God at work is a sign of their pride and hardness of heart. They cannot discern the works of God, and write off as evil a wondrous demonstration of God’s love for humanity. The religious authorities have failed to discern what is actually going on, and have taken the easy step of finding someone to blame, someone to write off. God’s healing love is being dismissed as the work of the Devil. This is a serious matter, as Jesus explains:
“Truly, I say to you, all sins will be forgiven the children of man, and whatever blasphemies they utter, but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin”— for they were saying, “He has an unclean spirit.”
“Yn wir, rwy’n dweud wrthych, maddeuir popeth i blant y ddaear, eu pechodau a’u cableddau, beth bynnag fyddant; ond pwy bynnag a gabla yn erbyn yr Ysbryd Glân, ni chaiff faddeuant byth; y mae’n euog o bechod tragwyddol.” Dywedodd hyn oherwydd iddynt ddweud, “Y mae ysbryd aflan ynddo.” (Mk 3:28-30)
The scribes have condemned themselves. Whereas they have accused Jesus of blasphemy, they are in fact the blasphemers. Jesus does not condemn them, but rather offers humanity the forgiveness of sins. This is another demonstration of God’s love being poured out on the world. The Kingdom of God is a place of healing and restoration.
Our Lord then has a confrontation with His relatives, which leads to a profound moment of teaching. When the crowd tell him that His family are outside, He answers, “Who are my mother and my brothers?””Pwy yw fy mam i a’m brodyr?” (Mk 3:33). Then, looking round, He says: ‘Here are my mother and my brothers!’ ‘Dyma fy mam a’m brodyr i’ (Mk 3:34).
Family was, and continues to be, important, for Jews juke like it is for people in general. The family unit is the basic building block of society. But Our Lord points out that ties of kinship are less important than humanity’s relationship with God. In our baptism, we all became brothers and sisters in Christ. The Church is our family, which calls us to live in a new way with each other, a way defined by love, and not the exercise of power or control. God offers us healing and wholeness, the forgiveness of our sins, so that we can be in a new relationship both with God and with each other.
The Church comes together as a family to experience forgiveness and to be nourished by Word and Sacrament in the Eucharist. This is the most profound and meaningful thing we, as human beings, can do together. It gives us a foretaste of the joy of Heaven. In it we are fed by God, and with God. God gives himself for us, so that we might have life in Him.
Let us therefore come and be nourished. Let us invite others to become part of God’s family. Joining with Christians throughout the world, may we sing the praises of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. To whom be ascribed all glory, dominion, and power, now and forever. Amen.
