If someone asks you: “Where
do you live?” how do you answer that?
In today’s gospel, we hear
that question: “Rabbi, where are you staying?” And the response
of Jesus is not the usual street address /parish/high school kind of answer.
“Come and you will see!” As if to say: “You can’t answer
that question with words – only with actions, only with what really reveals
the heart and soul. And notice what happens in the gospel. The two disciples
stay with Jesus the rest of that day, from 4:00 on. And what they see as they
watch Jesus interact with his family, with his friends, for the rest of that
day is enough for Andrew. There is something about this Jesus, something about
how he lived that ordinary day at home that clinches it for Andrew. He tracks
down his brother and says: “THIS IS IT.” I’ve found the one.
And now I know where I will live for the rest of my days – following this
one, letting his dream become my dream, letting his passion become my passion.
“Where am I staying? Peter, I will spend the rest of my days staying with
this one called the messiah. That’s where I will stay, that’s where
I will live.”
“Where are you staying?” It is one of the more important questions
that the disciples ask Jesus. But I believe it to be one of the important questions
that the gospels ask of us. Where are you staying? Where do you live? For the
disciples discovered, there are no guarantees in that reply of Jesus. Come and
you will see took them to work among the poorest of the poor. Come and you will
see, invited them to journey to the Cross at Calvary and their own crosses,
scattered throughout Christendom. Come and you will see, may take you and I
to the inner cities of St. Louis or to places like Micronesia to work with the
poor. It may invite you to create caring communities in our neighborhoods. Like
Dr. Martin Luther King, it may bid you to combat racism in all its forms, to
march in political rallies, to get involved in the shaping our laws and policies.
To all the places where Jesus lives, where Jesus stays, we are invited to stay.
“Where are you staying?” Close to the master. Close to the places
where He spent His energy. Close to his love.
This week, I invite that gospel question of the disciples to be the question
of your prayer – where are you staying… What are the things that
you are passionate about, the places where you are ALIVE and not just surviving…
And then, like Samuel in the first reading, in the urgings that are revealed
to us, in the longings of our hearts, may we hear the voice of Jesus calling
our names, and like Samuel, may we respond: Here I am Lord, I come to do your
will…