Categories
Benedictine Spirituality Christ Discernment Gospel Lectio Divina Scripture Uncategorized

Becoming childlike.

Image by Eiserner Gustav from pixabay.com

In today’s gospel Jesus once again turns our ideas on their heads. In response to his disciples question about who is the greatest he challenges them to look at greatness in a new way. He doesn’t tell them to pay attention to the learned and the clever, the experts and politicians. Instead he tells them to look at little children and to model themselves on them:

“He said, ‘I tell you solemnly, unless you change and become like little children you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. And so, those who make themselves as little as this little child are the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”

This must have surprised the disciples, they, like us would not have expected to model their behaviour on the children around them. The opposite would have been true, then as now. The gospel calls us to examine that view. It invites us ask what Jesus saw in the children that he didn’t find in those adults concerned with position and status, and to look at what we can learn from them.

Children are open and trusting. They are curious about others and willing to learn. When they are involved in some activity they give it their whole attention, it absorbs them completely. They have an innate sense of fairness and justice. These are qualities that we seem to lose as we grow older. To watch that is a delight and a challenge. Reflecting on today’s gospel it seems to me that Jesus is asking us to look at where we can rediscover these attributes in our lives.


Where is Christ calling you to be open and trusting today?