How does Jesus see?
How do we see? In an essay
titled, Person to Person: Becoming
Present by Barbara Newman she writes: “I do not think we can see with God’s
eyes until, at least once, we have had the experience of being seen with
them. If we are lucky, that happens in
ordinary human love…But the ability to see everyone in such a way—not just our
friends or people we admire, but everyone, from the screaming infant to the
dangerous enemy—is both a discipline and a gift. Like every gift of the Holy Spirit, it is
given freely. But…we first have to ask
for it and show with our whole life how much we long for it” (Spiritus,
16.1, 2016, p.100). Do we long to see
with God’s eyes? Do we continually ask
for this gift, do we importune God in prayer for this daily grace?
How does Jesus see?
How does he challenge us to see as he sees? One could do a lectio reading of the synoptic gospels just on these questions. How do we see? Imagine if we interface our seeing with
Jesus’ way of seeing. How would this
interfacing with the Incarnate One expand our horizons, purify the intentions
of our heart, the eye of our heart? One
could, as well, include in this lectio
reading of the gospels the ‘not seeing’ of Jesus’ disciples and the tainted
seeing (often with evil intent) of the Pharisees. Let us not forget the teaching of Cassian:
the way, he says, is ‘purity of heart’ for it is the pure of heart that truly
see, see God in all things and all persons.
Just to get a sense of how Jesus sees let’s look at a few
random selections from the gospels. In a
story from Mark’s gospel, we have Jesus going into the synagogue where there was
a man who had a withered hand. Here in
this story we have two different ways of seeing. First
we have the Pharisees “who watched
Jesus closely to see if he would
cure him on the Sabbath so they might accuse him” (3:2). Already the inner eye of the Pharisees is
tainted: they are watching Jesus closely in order to trap him. Jesus
sees the heart, he sees what these religious leaders are up to: “Looking around
at them with anger and grieved at their hardness of heart” (3:5), Jesus
proceeds to heal the man with the withered hand on the Sabbath. He looks around and sees: he is grieved at
what he sees: he sees their hardness of heart, he sees their deceptive motives! And another story from Mark’s gospel of the
rich man who asked Jesus what he must do to inherit eternal life. Jesus recites the commandments and the rich
man responds: “Teacher all of these I have observed since my youth”
(10:20). Jesus looks at him and loves
him, then tells him the one thing he lacks. Jesus sees the man in his totality and out of
a loving gaze challenges him by telling him what he lacks, what he still needs
to do. A final story from Luke’s gospel
of the ‘Good Samaritan’ (10:25-37): This passage also begins with the question:
“Teacher what must I do to inherit eternal life”. Jesus replies with the great commandment of
loving God with the whole of one’s being and one’s neighbor as oneself and the
lawyer to justify himself asks ‘who is my neighbor’? Jesus then tells the story of the ‘Good
Samaritan’. One of the poignant features
of this story is ‘how one sees’: ‘A priest happened to be going down that road
but when he saw the wounded man, he
passed by on the opposite side (vs:31).
Likewise a Levite came to the place, and when he saw him, he passed by on the opposite side (vs:32). But a Samaritan traveler who came upon him
was moved with compassion at the sight’
(v:34). Seeing for the Samaritan evokes
profound compassion. This compassion is
what Jesus wants us to see and then to live.
Jesus also wants us to be aware of our partial, selective seeing, or, of
how we do see and then ignore what we see, or when our seeing is blurred or
blinded by a hardened heart.
The Incarnation, Barbara Newman says, provides the lens God
gives us to see, to see as Jesus sees.
She continues: “Through this lens alone we truly see God and the
world. So many other lenses obstruct our
eyes, like grimy windows or distorting mirrors, that we are not even aware of
them” (p.100). It is important to
ponder: what are those ‘other lenses’ that ‘obstruct our eyes’ and thus cloud
and mire our vision? No wonder St.
Benedict will exhort us to keep daily custody of our hearts, the eye of our
hearts!
Barbara Newman goes on to say that: “Only through the
Incarnation do we truly see the world….To see with the eyes of Christ is to see
both at once, the divine beauty and the complicated work-in-progress that each
one of us is. To see in Christ also
means to see other persons as images of Christ, possessing infinite depth and
value” (p.101). So how can our ‘seeing’
in community become more Christ-like? One essential way is to step back, pause,
reflect on how I am seeing in any given moment, a person or a situation, and
bring that ‘seeing’ into prayer. To ponder
in the silence of prayer, how would Jesus see this person, how would Jesus look
upon this situation that I am facing: will this not begin to shift our seeing,
to transform the eye of our heart? If
we are to ‘show with the whole of our life’ that we long to see as Christ sees
then we will run quickly to prayer, praying to see with the clarity, the truth,
the inclusiveness, the compassion that Christ sees with.
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