Jesus also said to them, “Amen,
I say to you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they
see that the Kingdom of God has come in power.” (Mark 9:1)
These
words from this morning’s Gospel reading (in the Ordinary Form) give rise to a
certain question: How can it be that the Lord Jesus would tell the disciples
that some of them would live until the coming of God’s Kingdom? Does he mean to
suggest that they would live until the second coming? What is the Kingdom of
which Christ here speaks?
For
our answer, we turn to the great Jesuit biblical scholar, Fr. Cornelius a’
Lapide (all that follows is from his Commentary on the Gospels).
The Kingdom is the Church,
or Christ Transfigured
In His Kingdom. You will ask what was this kingdom of
Christ; and when some of the Apostles standing there beheld it? S. Gregory
answers (Hom. 32, in Evang.), and Bede, that this kingdom of Christ was the
Church, and its diffusion throughout all nations, which verily the Apostles
beheld, yea, brought about. Christ says this, says S. Gregory, that from the
spread of the Church’s kingdom, which they were about to behold, they might
learn how great would be their future glory in the heavenly kingdom, which in this
life is invisible. For God, by the visible things, which He sets forth,
confirms the hope of the invisible promises. And, 2. Some think that it was to
take place at the resurrection, and in the day of judgment, of which Christ
spake in the preceding verse.
But
I say it took place in the Transfiguration of Christ. For in it they beheld
Christ’s glorious kingdom as in a glass. Three of the Apostles, namely, Peter,
James, and John, had a foretaste of this kingdom. This view is plain from what
follows. All the three Evangelists who relate the Transfiguration, place it
immediately after this promise, as though it were the fulfillment of it. Thus
SS. Hilary, Chrysostom, Jerome, Ambrose, Theophylact, and others, passim.
Whence S. Leo says (de Transfig.). In the
kingdom, that is in royal splendour. For in His Transfiguration Christ gave
to His Apostles a specimen of the glory, the joy and the happiness which the
Saints shall obtain in the Heavenly Kingdom, that He might thereby animate them
to Evangelical labours and sorrows, and that they might animate others to the
same.
After
the same manner S. Jerome animates Eustochium. “Go forth,” he saith, “for a
little space from thy prison, and picture to thine eyes the reward of thy
present labours, which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it
entered into the heart of man. What sort of day will that be when Mary the
mother of the Lord shall meet thee with choirs of virgins? When after Pharaoh
with his host has been drowned in the Red Sea, she shall sing the antiphon to
the responsive choirs, as she bears the timbrel. Let us sing to the Lord, for
he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the
sea. Then shall Thecla joyfully fly to embrace thee. Then too the Spouse
Himself shall meet thee, and shall say, Arise and come, My kinswoman, and My
fair one, for lo the winter is passed, the rain is over. Then the angels shall
wonder and say, who is this that looketh forth as the morning, beautiful as the
moon, chosen as the sun? Then the little ones, lifting up the palms of victory,
shall sing with concordant voice, ‘Hosanna in the Highest! Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the Highest!’ Then the hundred and
forty and four thousand before the Throne, and before the Elders shall hold
their harps, and shall chant the new song.”
Maranatha, Come Lord Jesus!
Many modern Biblical scholars (read liberal) use this quote to somehow show Jesus wasn't divine and made mistakes about the Parousia.
ReplyDeleteThats their problem, not Our
Lord's. I believe Christ's prophecy was fulfilled in these words in the Resurection. Christ's defeat of death, and our redemption is the coming of the Kingdom in Power!
Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteThe opinion you criticize (which is held by many liberals today) has indeed been condemned by Gregory the Great as a heresy -- it is called agnoeticism.
The agnoetics claimed that Christ did not know the day or hour of his Second Coming -- specifically they claimed that Christ, in his human intellect, was ignorant.
The Catholic doctrine has maintained that Christ knew the time of the Parousia not "from" his humanity, but "in" his humanity [for it was infused knowledge given to his soul, rather than knowledge from sense experience].
Yes, you are quite correct to reject these modern heretical scholars! And I do agree that the Resurrection is also a fulfillment of this prophecy.
The Pope, in "Jesus of Nazareth", says Jesus meant His Transfiguration.
ReplyDeleteI also think this, and I think He even meant, for John at least, His apparition to show him what had happened, was happening, and was to happen, as recorded in the Book of Revelation.
Hi all,
ReplyDeleteActually, the Bible explicitly gives us the answer to this question:
[16] For we have not by following artificial fables, made known to you the power, and presence of our Lord Jesus Christ; but we were eyewitnesses of his greatness. [17] For he received from God the Father, honour and glory: this voice coming down to him from the excellent glory: This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye him. [18] And this voice we heard brought from heaven, when we were with him in the holy mount. (2nd Peter 1)
Here Peter is speaking of the Transfiguration, and he uses the same language as Jesus did in the Gospels.