You’ve been friends forever. You
know everything there is to know about your friend. Nothing you could ever learn
would surprise you. While at the beach this summer with friends,
we looked at each other and counted the number of years we had known one another
– some 5, 10, 15, 20, and others a whole lifetime! “I remember playing a game at my 50th
birthday party of people guessing “things” about me,” shared a friend in the
group; “My friend of over 20 years was getting pretty angry when she guessed wrong.
It was crazy; she even argued with me saying
that my answers were wrong!” We all laughed!
Is it possible that we fail to
pay attention to our friend’s attributes once we think we know them completely?
Perhaps we tune out and stop attending to their reactions, stories, and dreams.
Maybe we even finish their sentences, because we already know what they were
going to say?
Do we feel the same way about
Jesus? We hear a familiar Sunday Gospel about Jesus – his miracles, his
parables, and his conversations with the Pharisees, the rich man, the Samaritan
woman and we tune out. Oh yeah, I know
that story and our mind wanders to what “to do” after Mass. We know everything
there is to know about Jesus.
“Who do men say that I am,” Jesus
asked his disciples? He got a whole bunch of answers: John the Baptist, Elijah, one of the prophets
– all wrong! Jesus pressed further, “Who do you say that I
am?” Since we read the Gospel as a flashback, we know Peter gives the right
answer, “You are the Christ” (Mark 8:29). Peter was the first to “know” Jesus
as the Messiah. Who is Jesus for you? Christ wants us to know and love him as
deeply as he knows and loves us. God knows everything about us (Psalm 139); but
do we know the many faces of Jesus?
Interestingly each of the Gospels
offers four faces of Jesus that highlight his personality, teachings, and deeds
revealing his humanity and divinity. Mark, Matthew, Luke and John wrote about who Jesus was for them in the hopes that
it would lead the community into deeper faith. Each evangelist wrote to a
unique audience that differed in religious background, culture and ethnicity
highlighting different facets of Jesus’ personality. Virginia Smith describes
the four Gospel portraits of Jesus to provide a more complete image of who
Jesus is.


Luke wrote for the Gentiles to show
that Jesus’ salvation was for everyone, not just the Jews. Luke’s Jesus is compassionate
and forgiving; he advocates for the poor, sinners, and outcasts. None
are more ostracized than the Samaritans and yet they are the heroes in two of
Jesus’ parables. Jesus affirms women giving them a legacy as disciples in his
birth, life, death, and resurrection. In
Luke we discover the richness of God’s mercy in the story of the Prodigal Son –
The Father, symbolizing our Father in heaven, watches and prays for his child’s
repentance. This gospel’s climax is Jesus’ words from the cross, “Father,
forgive them, they know not what they do.” To a criminal who simply asked to be
remembered, Jesus gave him Paradise (Luke 23:34; 42-43).


Perhaps we can recite by heart a Gospel story about Jesus. Resist the temptation to skip over it. Rather read it slowly because it is an encounter with the divine; the Holy Spirit speaks to us through its words. As we listen, we will hear Jesus ask us throughout our lives, “Who do you say that I am?” He doesn’t ask us this question, because he doesn’t know his identity, but rather the Carmelite Sisters tell us that Jesus “starts to move us, guide us, and prompt us to a whole new place in our lives. He wants us to have a fuller understanding of who we are. That place and that deeper understanding of ourselves is ultimately within Him, within His heart.” Jesus is trying to build within us a fortress where we able to stand firmly believing in him in all the moments of our lives, in every season, and for the rest of our lives.
Journaling with Jesus
Which face of Jesus best
describes your relationship with Jesus today?
Which face of Jesus challenges
you the most?
Which face of Jesus draws you
most closely into the mystery of faith?
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