Sunday, October 15, 2006

Back from several days in Cincinnati

No, my cold didn't turn into Bird Flu, nor did I go on a secret mission for the Holy Father; I simply went to Cincinnati for a seminar over several days. Now I'm back.

No homily for this weekend, sorry.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I thought you had to be a Jesuit to be a Catholic spy?

Anonymous said...

Good to find your blog. I started mine on Friday last.

Look forward to hearing more about your travels and thoughts!

God bless
Maria
www.inhishands.co.uk

the Joneses said...

Rats. I was looking forward to your take on the rich young ruler passage.

Anonymous said...

"Rats. I was looking forward to your take on the rich young ruler passage."

As was I, The Joneses.

Take a look at what another priest I really like, Father John Garrett, has to say ...

Father Garrett's Blog

Fr Martin Fox said...

Thanks for the votes of confidence.

Here's a thought about the Gospel passage proclaimed yesterday (it came to me as I was concelebrating Mass, which is a luxury for a priest -- merely to be a concelebrant)...

The priest who had the Mass asked, did this man ever come back? And I thought of how enigmatic this passage was; then I thought of another enigmatic feature of Mark: there is, in chapter 14, in the account of our Lord's arrest in Gethsemane on Holy Thursday, this curious detail (not mentioned in any other Gospel):

"Now a young man followed him wearing nothing but a linen cloth about his body. They seized him, but he left the cloth behind and ran off naked" (14:51-52).

Now, what I noted was two instances of a on-again, off-again nameless follower. Note, the first reference, from yesterday, is simply to a man (not a ruler; not in Mark, and no direct reference to his age -- these come from other Gospels). Here, we have a "young man." If Mark wanted us to connect these two, I'd have expected him to use more parallel descriptions.

But I also note that the "he went away sad" does invite the question, what became of him? Will he return?

And the enigmatic description of a young man with nothing but a linen cloth is odd: why would he be so attired? Well, one reason would be if he gave away everything! However, the "he ran away" doesn't fit very well, since the point of something like this would be: the young man couldn't shake the Lord's words, and finally, he did as the Lord commanded, and gave it all way; and you would think that would lead to a happy ending: he stuck with the Lord. But no.

But again, the question arises, what became of the naked young man?

And here, tradition provides an answer: I believe -- although I can't recall where -- that this young man has been taken to be Mark himself, the author of the Gospel!

It's also noteworthy that Mark is described in Acts as running away from a mission trip with Paul -- which caused dissension between Paul and Barnabas. But later, in one of his letters, Paul speaks well of Mark.

Anyway, none of this proves anything, but it is what I've been thinking about. Perhaps someone else has something to add?

p8 said...

Well, under the whole rubric of probably-reading-too-much-into-it, the whole thing about being naked and hiding in a Garden rings a lot of bells.

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