Saturday 4/6/19 Who are you?

I will never forget the first time my mother heard the 1976 power ballad “Beth.” I was around 15 when I rediscovered it and because it wasn’t a typical rock song, I thought she might like it as well. It wasn’t an easy sell. Despite my telling her that this song was not the head banging hair metal I was into at the time, she was all too familiar with my taste in music and she was less than thrilled about getting roped into listening to some song, but as she took in the orchestral arrangement and the gentle lyrics, she couldn’t help wondering who recorded it. 

            “Well mom, it’s KISS,” I told her. 

            She didn’t believe me. “That can’t be KISS! I’ve seen those freaks and that god-awful makeup they wear and there is no way that’s one of their songs!” (I don’t know why their musical range was limited by their stage image in her mind, but that was my mom for you. Don’t try and figure it out.) 

            The point is, you can’t judge a song by a band or a band by a song and when you stop to think about it, the Gospel writers spend a phenomenal amount of time making the case for who Jesus was and dispelling who the community thought He wasn’t. 

            Over the course of four books, Jesus amasses a lot of monikers throughout his public ministry. His fans and followers who think that He is something special call him a prophet, a teacher (or rabbi), Lord, Master, Messiah and Christ; while those who are skeptical call him everything from a simple carpenter’s son to the semi-insulting “Mary’s son” (as a nod to His supposed illegitimacy) and of course, “The King of the Jews.” Believe me; that last label was not intended to be a compliment when it was immortalized in writing. 

            While there were those who were open to His message and willing to listen to what he had to say, there were others who pigeonholed Him the way my mom misjudged the song “Beth.” He couldn’t be the Messiah because he didn’t fit into the pre-established role. He could turn every drop of water into wine, multiply every loaf of bread in the-tri county area and heal any number of conditions, but there would be those who simply shook their heads and said “Nice try, but I’ve been fooled before and I won’t get fooled again.” 

            Like Jesus, we experience the same type of thing throughout our lives. There are those who limit their definition of us based on what they think they know and others who are willing to see that we are so much more. Despite her early hatred of KISS, my mom eventually amended her opinion of the band after hearing that Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were highly intelligent, clean living musicians who belied their unusual stage image with their business acumen and philanthropic efforts; and there were those who came around to seeing Jesus for what He was simply by listening to the message behind the man. Perhaps fewer people in our own lives will try to label us if we stop trying to fit into a pre-defined role. After all, a label is not a definition as a general rule it is the myriad of definitions that render labels so versatile. 

            So tell me, who are you? I really want to know. 

Today’s readings for Mass: JER 11:18-20; PS 7:2-3, 9BC-10, 11-12; JN 7:40-53

About the Author

Julie Young is an award-winning writer and author from Indianapolis, Indiana in the USA, whose work has been seen in Today’s Catholic Teacher, The Catholic Moment, and National Catholic Reporter. She is the author of nine books including: A Belief in Providence: A Life of Saint Theodora Guerin, The CYO in Indianapolis and Central Indiana and The Complete Idiot's Guide to Catholicism. She is a graduate of Scecina Memorial High School in Indianapolis and holds degrees in writing and education from Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College. She can be found online at www.julieyoungfreelance.com

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6 Comments

  1. Hi Julie,
    Nice and inspiring reflection. Thank you and God all followers of this site and Catholic Moment.

  2. Our Sisters in Dublin got a puncture and were terrified when some punk guys stopped. But to their relief and amazement they changed the tyre for them. We really can’t judge a book by its cover. Thanks for sharing your insights

  3. Thanks Julie. You’ve got me thinking…who am I? Maybe not what people think. Only God knows.

  4. I appreciate all the reflections on this site.Thank you to all of the writers who offer their insights and thoughts on the daily gospel readings.They inspire me and speak to me on a personal level.Thank you all for the valuable work you do.God Bless.

  5. Julie, I couldn’t help smiling at your mom’s description of KISS. We must be of the same generation. Correct me if if I’m wrong, but is Gene Simmons the one that sticks his long tongue out, or Mick Jaegger. It is repulsive. So, I can see why your Mom would be turned off. But yes, once you listen to their music, it’s hard to believe what comes out. I don’t like all of their music, but there is much to enjoy. The old idiom NEVER JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER is as relevant today as it was in the 1800s when it was first coined. Some years ago, a woman I had worked with in the Church and I were having a discussion about who Jesus was. She remarked that if she lived in Jesus’ time, she would not follow him because he was way too radical! I on the other hand said I would have been impressed with the way he took on the establishment. It’s all about perspective. She judged him based on her comfortable lifestyle. I judged him based on the trials I was going through. The Pharisees were the educated elite and Jesus did not fall into their image of a Messiah. They did not see him as educated or refined, and the fact that he poked holes in their knowledge of scripture had to have been incredibly insulting – as one of them said “where did he get all this knowledge, isn’t he the carpenter’s son?”

    Sadly, we all have a tendency to think we know somebody just by looking at them. Even after we listen to them, we try to find something about them not to like. Like your mom, I still think KISS and Mick Jaegger of The Rolling Stones are weird looking, but I have a whole lot more respect for who they are as intelligent, smart, savvy human beings.

    The image of KISS compared with the beautiful images of Jesus will forever be imprinted in my brain! (Just injecting a little humour!). My ‘baby boomer’ thoughts for what it’s worth.

    Have a blessed weekend. God bless.

  6. I wouldn’t qualify Gene Simmons (Chris, he’s the one with the tongue) as “clean living.” Apparently, he says he has had sex with 1000 (yes, one thousand) or over 1000 women. That’s his claim to fame (other than being in KISS, I suppose).

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