Monday, January 28, 2018 – Binding the Strong Man

There are times when the doubts about God in our culture have an effect on me.  I begin to question:  Does God really exist?  Do I really have a relationship with him?  Is God truly in charge of the world? 

The anchor I return to first in those moments is not any of the specific goodnesses God has shown to me, though they are many, nor do I recite the Creed.  The anchor I return to I was told at a music workshop in Cincinnati some years ago by the speaker, Bill Richart.

Bill’s Story

Bill had been to Poland on a tour.  On this particular day the tour group’s main activity was to tour Auschwitz, the infamous concentration camp where the Nazis killed more than a million people, including St. Maximilian Kolbe.  However, on the way to Auschwitz, within a few miles of it, they passed both the birthplace of St. Pope John Paul II and the site where St. Faustina’s convent stood when Jesus appeared to her and told her to promote his Divine Mercy. 

I don’t know whether Bill drew the connection as he talked or I did as I listened, but this Truth of events was clear:   more than 20 years before Auschwitz claimed its first victim, the person who would bring down the iron curtain of communism was born within its shadow; in the decade of the 1930s when communism and fascism thrived, God was giving a simple nun a devotion to remedy the spiritual effects of the culture of death of the 20th century.  God did this quietly, within a few miles, in the often dismissed country of Poland.

God was in charge.  God is in charge.  It is hard to “bind the strong man,” as Jesus talks about in the Gospel today.  But God is doing it.

Jesus Binds the Strong Man

In today’s Gospel Jesus is very busy.  Chapter 3 of Mark begins with a note that so many people came to Jesus that he didn’t even have time to eat.  He is proclaiming “The Kingdom of God is at hand” and proving it by healing many with diseases and by casting out demons.  People want to be healed.  They want to be set free.  So they come to hear and be touched.

Enter the scribes and Pharisees. The battle of the next three years with them begins.  It was a common belief in that time that greater devils could and would cast out lesser ones—just as stronger military or political leaders overtook their weaker opponents.  The priests, scribes, and Pharisees were not healing people.  They couldn’t do what Jesus was doing.  AND Jesus was not following the normal path of a rabbi.  He was speaking with authority.  He was saying things like, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”  He was not only curing, he was curing on the Sabbath.

He did not fit their picture of how God works.

So they concluded he must not be of God. He must be of Satan.

Jesus responds to their distress with logic:

“How can Satan drive out Satan?
If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand.
And if a house is divided against itself,
that house will not be able to stand.
And if Satan has risen up against himself and is divided,
he cannot stand;
that is the end of him.

He is saying in effect, “Think about it:  you are seeing people healed, calmed, made normal.  The signs of evil on them are gone.  Would Satan do away with his ability to do harm?  That would be working against himself.  So, if I am doing that, how could I be working for Satan?”

Makes sense.

Jesus goes on to explain:

But no one can enter a strong man’s house to plunder his property
unless he first ties up the strong man.
Then he can plunder his house.

This is the deeper explanation. Jesus recognizes Satan can be powerful.  Jesus is binding up the strong man, Satan.  He is countering the effects of evil Satan works on ordinary folks:  sickness, mental illness, bodies that don’t work, leprosy.  In a real sense, Jesus is saying, “Satan is my real enemy.”

He has to do that first before he can truly lead people into the Kingdom of God.

Blasphemy Against the Holy Spirit

But then Jesus says something that has always perplexed me:

Amen, I say to you, all sins and all blasphemies
that people utter will be forgiven them.
But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit
will never have forgiveness,
but is guilty of an everlasting sin.”
For they had said, “He has an unclean spirit.”

What is “blasphemy against the Holy Spirit?”  According to the Catholic Catechism, it is to deliberately refuse to accept God’s mercy by refusing to repent.  It is choosing to stick with the strong man, Satan, rather than choose to accept forgiveness and salvation. Such a hardness of heart can lead to final impenitence and eternal loss. (CCC 1864)  To blaspheme is to show a lack of respect for God.  As I understand this today, it means that blaspheming against the Holy Spirit is refusing to see and make use of the power of the Holy Spirit to draw a person to repentance. It is refusing to see and align ourselves with what God is doing in the world.

Binding the Strong Man Today

I circle back to Auschwitz, St. Pope John Paul II, and Sr. Faustina.  Auschwitz stands out as a place and symbol of the “Culture of Death” which St. Pope John Paul II named as the zeitgeist of the 20th century. But that was not all St. Pope John Paul said about that century.  He also said that the greatest sin of the 20th century was the sin of refusing to see sin.

You can’t turn from wrong until and unless you see it is wrong.  Sometimes you dare not see the wrong, especially sin in yourself, unless you ALSO have an understanding of the great Mercy of God–unless you see what the Kingdom of God looks like and that God wants you to be a part of it.

God’s mercy is endless—if we turn from sin and to him.  Satan’s power for evil is relentless—unless we turn from sin and to God.  Quietly, in two very ordinary communities, in 1920 and through the 1930s, God was in charge.  He was proclaiming the “Kingdom of God is at hand” JUST AS MUCH as he was speaking the same message in the synagogues and around the wells of Galilee.  God was binding up the strong man in the first century….and in the 20th…and today.

Have no fear.  Our God is here.

Prayer:

Lord, let me always remember and recognize you are here, today, in this world, in my little corner of the world.  Every time I believe and follow you I proclaim your kingdom.  I, too, bind up the strong man. I listen to and obey the Holy Spirit. Help me to do my part to follow you and bind evil in how I spend my time today. Give me the grace ALWAYS to believe your goodness can and will overcome evil–if we simply let ourselves be drawn to you, to mercy—while turning away from sin. Draw me close, Lord. ALWAYS.

About the Author

Mary Ortwein lives in Frankfort, Kentucky in the US. A convert to Catholicism in 1969, Mary had a deeper conversion in 2010. She earned a theology degree from St. Meinrad School of Theology in 2015. Now an Oblate of St. Meinrad, Mary takes as her model Anna, who met the Holy Family in the temple at the Presentation. Like Anna, Mary spends time praying, working in church settings, and enjoying the people she meets. Though formally retired, Mary continues to work part-time as a marriage and family therapist and therapy supervisor. A grandmother and widow, she divides the rest of her time between facilitating small faith-sharing groups, writing, and being with family and friends. Earlier in her life, Mary worked avidly in the pro-life movement. In recent years that has taken the form of Eucharistic ministry to Carebound and educating about end-of-life matters. Now, as Respect for Human Life returns to center stage, she seeks to find ways to communicate God's love and Lordship for all--from the moment of conception through the moment we appear before Jesus when life ends.

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8 Comments

  1. Thanks for your reflection which I look forward to each Sunday. I note from your bio that you have been a member of the Church for fifty years this year. I am glad you are with us and providing a cradle Catholic like me with your weekly reflection. All the best.

  2. I too am a convert. 1956. Thank you right now for these wonderful words of wisdom. If we don’t know sin how can we come against sin. I pray to our God, to Jesus and the Holy Spirit that our country will see sin, and know sin. Turn minds and hearts back to the Lord and save us from all evil decisions, so much so in our goverment and the evil of abortion. Thank You Mary and God Bless You. You are a Blessing to all of us……

  3. Your prayer today is beautiful. Thank you for your wonderful words and inspiration. We are blessed!

  4. Thank you Mary for mentioning my often “dismissed” country! Greetings from Poland! Please pray for Poland as a lot of Poles turn away from the Catholic Church and hatred starts growing in so many hearts. May it change into God’s love

  5. Mary, thanks again for a wonderful reflection. I, like you, also get discouraged about our country’s and world’s lack of belief in God’s great existence. I don’t understand it, but I know that at my darkest points God’s presence was always there. So I go back to the idea that I cannot possibly see His great plan for unifying hearts and seeing the sins of the world…but I know He is here with us. The children in cages, the lies, the turning away of refugees, the anger and the hatred are there, but God’s presence is there also. I see it in people who want to help. People who are moving to the Holy Spirit in them. I am focusing on those stories so I don’t live in the darkness of the rest of it. I am praying more too…That is always good.

  6. Yesterday, people in most countries commemorated International Holocaust Remembrance Day marking the anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Mary, your introduction to the binding of the strong man brought back memories of my pilgrimage to Auschwitz. Even after my visit, my mind was still having a difficult time grasping the immensity of the evil one human being was able to inflict on so many. The media reported yesterday that a book owned by Hitler recorded the possible annihilation of Jews in Canada. It gripped my heart. They also noted that many millennials did not know about the Holocaust (not just in North America, but also in Germany). How is that possible? Is it perhaps because new holocausts are playing out daily? Someone once said if we don’t remember the past we are doomed to repeat it. And we are. God needs to bind the strong men of our time. This Gospel reading today strikes at the heart. I often think when I read these and other commentaries, that they are speaking to the converted!

    Thank you for reminding us that God is in control, that He is binding up the strong man in this 21st century (Anno Domini era or Common Era). I hold on to that Truth.

    God bless.

  7. I would like to point out that a lot of people in Poland are leaving the Church due to the hatred of others being preached and promoted from Polish pulpits. Here in Canada, I had to leave the Polish church I was attending, because I couldn’t stand it anymore. I went to a Canadian church, and haven’t looked back. Polish priests have a knack for preaching guilt, the old hellfire rhetoric. No compassion, no mercy. Shocking that the concept of Divine Mercy was revealed in Poland.

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