
Off By Six Miles 
The Night is a book written by a Jewish man,
who after going through the traumatic experience
of the concentration camps during the Second
World War loses his faith in God and in humanity.
His name is Elie Weisel.
The shock is immediate. As the villagers
from Sighet in Transylvania prepare to enter
the camp, they see a ditch where babies are
being thrown into a burning flame. "Never
shall I forget that night, the first night
in camp, which has turned my life into one
long night, seven times cursed and seven
times sealed....Never shall I forget those
moments which murdered my God and my soul
and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall
I forget these things, even if I am condemned
to live as long as God Himself. Never."
He witnesses many hangings. But one remained
impressed in his mind. A young boy, who is
well liked and described as having the face
of an angel, is hanged on the gallows along
with two adults. The adults die right away,
but the young boy, being so light, struggles
on the gallows for over half an hour.
The inmates are required to pass by and look
at this boy dangling on the rope still alive.
A man behind Elie asks, "Where is God
now?" Elie hears a voice within him
answer: "Where is He? Here He is - He
is hanging here on this gallows." That
night - the author adds - the soup tasted
of copses.
Life is what it is. And part of life is suffering.
And suffering always forces us to ask 'why?'
Weisel solves the problem quite easily, he
eliminates God. One cannot have God and suffering.
It is either one or the other. Either God
is powerful and prevents suffering from happening.
Or God does not exist and so suffering has
the upper hand.
Perhaps deep down a number of us takes the
same position. The quixotic story of the
Three Magi may possibly shed some light.
This story that Matthew recounts finds its
origin in Isaiah 60. The Jews, around 580
BC, had been in exile in Iraq for a couple
of generations and had come back to the bombed-out
city of Jerusalem. But Jerusalem is destroyed,
the homes and towers torn down, economy in
shambles. They are in despair.
In the middle of the mess, an amazing poet
invites his discouraged contemporaries to
look up and hope. "Rise, shine, for
your light has come." Isaiah anticipates
that Jerusalem will again become a beehive
of productivity and prosperity.
So when the Magi arrive they instinctively
go to Jerusalem. But the scholars of the
time inform them that they have the wrong
text. The right text is Micah 5:2-4: "But
you, O Bethlehem of Ephrata . . . from you
shall come forth for me one who is to rule
in Israel, whose origin is from of old .
. ."
The Magi head for Bethlehem, a rural place,
dusty, unnoticed and unpretentious and they
find him there.
It turns out that the Messiah will not be
the triumphant king who will solve all problems
- as we would like him to be - but a simple
man who will bring well being by his attentiveness
to the folks on the ground.
The Messiah is different from expectations.
God is real because He is always diverse.
He always disappoints us. A God who can enter
into these two centimeters of our brain is
not a God. He is a puppet.
The story of Epiphany is the story of these
two human communities: Jerusalem, with its
great pretensions, and Bethlehem, with its
modest promises.
Our story is also the constant choice between
journeying towards conceit, self sufficiency,
and the crazy expectation of solving all
our problems. Or journeying towards innocence,
weakness, walking without understanding.
Perhaps some of you have been to see the
small cave in Bethlehem where Jesus was born.
There is a big Church over it and to enter
the cave, where a star embedded in the floor
marks the birth of the King, one has to stoop.
The door is so low you can't go in standing
up.
The same is true of life. You cannot see
the world, life, Jesus Christ standing tall
- you have to get on your knees.
Bethlehem is six miles south of Jerusalem.
The wise men missed their goal by six miles.
How many miles are we off track?
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
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is included.
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