Further
notes on Mark 10.17-31
Having
presented us with the account of a man who managed many estates, who was
desperate to become one of Jesus’ apprentices but unable to take hold of the
thing he desired, the biographer Mark records for us Jesus’ conversation with
those who were already his apprentices. Those whose number the man longed to
join.
Jesus
employs a culturally familiar aphorism to convey how hard it is for those who
manage the business concerns of others – many estates – to live under and
participate in God's sovereign will. It is easier for a camel to pass through
the eye of a needle – that is, impossible for humans, but not for God.
For
anyone, to enter into this experience is like passing through a small gate,
easy to miss. But for those who manage many affairs, it is incomparably harder.
The
insurmountable problem preventing the man from embracing the thing he most
desires is not greed. Here is a man whose actions show that he loves God
wholeheartedly, soul-fully, mindfully, with every fibre of his being; and loved
his neighbour as himself.
He
is not a camel who is unwilling to pass through the eye of a surgeon’s needle,
but a camel who has tried and failed, because it is impossible, for anyone
other than God.
The
insurmountable problem preventing the man from embracing the thing he wants
most of all is that he has taken on an identity that is more than he can
continue to bear and has become so traumatised that he is – ironically and
tragically – unable to let it go. He has become traumatised by playing the role
of redeemer to too many people.
This
is often the tragedy of those who manage the affairs of others, whether
businessmen or women or politicians, who come to see themselves – and often,
themselves alone – as a saviour figure.
The
same is true of churchwardens and clergy, along with the patriarchs and
matriarchs of family units. Those who believe that if they do not do what needs
to be done, the world will fall apart; for no one can do it as well as them.
Jesus
saw the man and loved him. This is how Jesus always sees those who are weighed
down with many burdens, often self-imposed, burdens that distort our character
until we are, increasingly, unlovable. Unlovable, and yet loved. For this is
how God sees us, with eyes of love, for Jesus can only do what he sees the
Father doing.
Jesus
looks on the traumatised man with compassion.
He
loves him, and longs for him to be free of his burden. Free to heal, to grow
strong again. To be who he was created to be, and not what he had become.
This
is how God always beholds us, seeing us in our trauma, loving us, and moving to
set us free.
This
is why Jesus does not ask the man simply to surrender the estates he manages,
but also to surrender the capital he would receive in so doing. Not because he
is bound by greed, but because he is bound by the role of redeemer, of patron.
Because he needs to be radically cut off from that false self.
This
is not to say that we have no responsibility to help meet the needs of our
neighbours, of our families, of the poor. We do (Jesus rebukes those who have
the means to help but refuse to do so; he does not rebuke this man, or any
trauma survivor). But we are not their – or anyone’s – saviour.
It
is to say that Jesus is the master surgeon who rightly diagnoses our condition,
who understands our trauma – often exacerbated by our own crude attempts to
heal ourselves – and who holds out the very quality of life we long for. Whose
love is not conditional on our being able to receive it or respond.
It
is to say that the God who is one with Jesus can, alone, take that needle’s eye
and make it wide enough for a camel to pass through.
The
man was not able to become one of Jesus’ apprentices at that time, though this
is not to say it was a once-only offer, or that he did not get there in time.
We do not know. We do know that at that point of first invitation he
experienced both shock and grief, as is often the case when a trauma survivor
is offered the path of healing and growth, of integrating a difficult past
within a healthier future.
If
that is where you are today, that is okay. But you do not need to stay there
forever. Nor do I. May you know the love of God which pushes out our fear,
until we are able to step out from the roles we hide inside and step into the
life that is waiting for us.
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