Reflection for Sunday November 25, 2018: 34th Week of Ordinary Time.

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Rodriguez, Luis, S.J.

Issue Date

2018-11-25

Volume

Issue

Type

Essay

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

When we celebrate "Christ, the King", we might want to have a neat, exhaustive idea of what that means. Not because we would then go all out to celebrate it, but because we would want to know what we are up against. Understanding clearly its meaning would give us some sense of control: we would know how far Christ's claims on us might go and we could devise a system of "checks and balances" to protect ourselves. We almost spontaneously think in terms of familiar structures of political power.|What we are called to celebrate today is not a concept, but our recognizing Christ as the rule/norm of our daily living, our letting his values/preferences/choices be also our values/preferences/choices. Obviously, this is not the rule/norm of our society, as the craze of Black Friday and the shopping season show us. But if, contrary to how we desire to be ruled, this is how our society is in fact ruled, the question could occur to us: are we normal?|Of course, the answer to such question will depend on what we mean by "normal". If we understand "normal" statistically as the most frequent occurrence in our society, then no, we are not statistically "normal"... just look around. By the way, it should be clear that in his own society Jesus was also statistically ab-normal. As it happens, though, the word "normal" already existed long before statistics became a discipline. According to its strict etymology, "normal" meant –and still means– "according to a norm". Whatever is done according to a norm of acting is normal. If we declare Christ's teachings to be the norm of our living, then everything done according to that norm is totally, absolutely normal, regardless of frequency of occurrence. This "normalcy" is what we celebrate today: Christ as the norm of our living.

Description

Citation

Publisher

University Ministry, Creighton University.

License

These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

Lectionary Number: 161

ISSN

EISSN