Order of St. John Paul II

Authority – A Person Listened To & Respected

Throughout history, great leaders have arisen to lead peoples, nations, and kingdoms. There have been such leaders from ancient times until the present, leaders like Alexander the Great, Hannibal, Constantine, Tamerlane, Charles V, Suleiman the Magnificent, and Napoleon. These leaders ruled vast territory and were followed by great numbers of people. Not all these leaders were good men, however. Some of them abused their leadership and made life worse for their followers. In the end, all these leaders died and eventually the empires that they ruled disappeared.

In today’s gospel (Luke 4:31-37) Jesus is presented to us as a great leader. He is shown to be a teacher, an exorcist, and a healer. This visit to Capernaum takes place at the very beginning of Jesus’ public life. He has yet to attract the huge crowds that were to follow Him later. Now He is able to visit the synagogue and there teach the people. Later, such visits would be impossible because the huge crowds that followed Him were too big to be accommodated indoors. Even at this early time we see that Jesus is already a leader. His words (the teaching) and his actions (the exorcism) demonstrate his leadership. After this visit to Capernaum the number of people seeking to see and hear Jesus would steadily grow. St. Luke tells us that the people were astonished by his words and amazed by his exorcism of the evil spirit. We can well understand that they were. But we may ask what there was about Jesus that marked him as a leader and made the crowds want to follow him? The people of Israel had heard great teachers before. They had also witnessed exorcisms before. What was it that made Jesus a leader, a person who was listened to and respected. What was it that made people want to follow him? I think that St. Luke answered these questions when he said that Jesus spoke and acted with authority.

The dictionary tells us that authority is power or influence resulting from knowledge, fame, or prestige. The authority of Jesus comes from the fact that he is God. As God, Jesus has infinite knowledge and prestige. As man, Jesus was able to communicate that knowledge and prestige in such a way that it demonstrated the authority of which St. Luke speaks. When Jesus spoke and acted with that authority, people were moved to seek him out and to follow him. The result of Jesus speaking with authority was that news of him began to spread throughout all of Galilee and people began to come from all the surrounding areas to see and hear him. 

When I meditate over this gospel scene, and the many others like it, I am sometimes envious of the people of Galilee who lived in the time of Jesus and were able to see Him and listen to His words in person. But such thoughts help me to realize how important it is for me to seek to know Jesus better now and to follow Him more closely through prayer in my own life.

Jesus is a great leader, but unlike the leaders mentioned earlier, his kingdom is not an earthly one. And unlike the kingdoms of these earthly leaders, his kingdom survived and grew larger after his death. It will continue to grow and survive as long as this world lasts.n our own day. And it was something Jesus foretold would happen to his followers, simply for being his followers and proclaiming his vision of life. Let us make Jesus’ mission statement our own. It is what being a Christian means.

May God Bless You and Grant You His Peace!

Dr. Terry Rees
Superior General/Executive Director
Order of St. John Paul II
916-896-1327 (office)
916-687-1266 (mobile)
tfrees@sjp2.org
Building the City of God®

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