
Gospel Commentary: Live Jesus
By Fr. Paul Scalia
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 5/15/03)
The WWJD trend began several years ago. "WWJD?" What Would Jesus Do?
appeared on T-shirts, bracelets, necklaces, key chains, etc. The ubiquitous
question prompts its readers to reflect on our Lord's example before saying or doing
something. The instinct behind this devotional is a good one: to follow Jesus Christ means
to imitate Him. Yet there is something missing. Imitation of Christ is not the only part
of being Catholic. In fact, it is not even the first part.
"I am the vine, you are the branches," says the Lord. Discipleship means more
than just imitating Christ; it means living in constant union with Him, sharing His life.
He desires that His disciples be united to Him as organically as branches to a vine. Just
as branches draw life only from the vine, so also are we to draw life from Christ. Many
leaders exhort their followers to imitate their lives. Only Christ commands His disciples
to participate in His life.
This participation brings both a warning and a reward. First the warning: "Without
me you can do nothing." Unless we share His life, we cannot hope to imitate Him.
Union with Christ precedes imitation of Christ. We Americans with our "can
do" mentality and rugged individualist outlook bristle at the thought that we
cannot do something ourselves. But an honest assessment of Christ's demands and our
weakness confirms this truth.
Without the grace that comes from union with Christ, who can hope to fulfill the
requirements of discipleship? To love our enemies and pray for our persecutors? To forgive
as Christ forgives? To be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect? "Without me you
can do nothing." This summarizes the Church's teaching on the necessity of grace.
Without the grace of Christ we cannot accomplish anything, just as a branch cut off from
the vine bears no fruit and soon dies.
Notice how Mother Church, in her wisdom, has traditionally arranged catechisms to teach
the Sacraments before morality. That arrangement conveys the point that we need the grace
of the Sacraments in order to live morally. By way of the Sacraments most
especially Penance and the Eucharist we become branches on the vine.
Then comes the reward: "Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much
fruit." Although the necessity of grace humbles us with a reminder of our own
weakness, it also rewards us with great dignity. As Mother Teresa once observed, it is the
branches that bear fruit - not the vine. Certainly, branches do not bear fruit on their
own, nor their own fruit. It is the sap from the vine that enables them to bear fruit, and
it is ultimately the vine's fruit they bear. Nonetheless, they have the dignity of bearing
fruit.
So also our Lord, the true vine, is content to remain hidden and unseen while we, mere
branches, bear His fruit. Certainly, we do not bear fruit on our own, nor do we bear our
own fruit. It is the sap from the vine divine grace that enables us to bear
fruit, and it is ultimately Christ's life we bear. Nonetheless, we have the dignity of
being Christians.
"What Would Jesus Do?" is a helpful question as far as it goes. But it fails
as a summary of Catholic life. Christ desires participation in His life, not just
imitation of it. Christ the true vine wants His life lived, not just copied, by us
branches. We must, as St. Francis de Sales says so simply, "Live Jesus."
Fr. Scalia is parochial vicar of St. Patrick Parish in Chancellorsville.
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