Bellarmine University
“Take a Good Hard Look”
Rev. Ronald Knott
September 14, 2014
Serpents were biting people and many died.
So Moses made a bronze image of a serpent,
put it on a pole and made them look at it.
Numbers 21
If you have ever been in the hospital or flipped through the phone book looking for a physician, you’ve seen the image – two winged serpents wrapped around a staff. It is known as the caduceus. It has been the symbol of the American medical profession for nearly a hundred years – a decidedly odd symbol for doctors until you begin to investigate where it came from and its underlying meaning.
This ancient symbol of healing is referred to today’s first reading and the gospel. In their trek across the desert from the slavery of Egypt to the freedom of the Promised Land, the People of God underwent all sorts of trials and troubles. The one mentioned today is their plague of biting winged serpents. After praying for delivery from this awful plague, God instructs Moses to make a bronze image of the same serpents, put it on a pole and invite the people to take a good hard look at it. When they looked at it hard and long, they recovered.
Now this may sound like some kind of voodoo magic, but it isn’t! It’s primitive psychology! All you future nurses, doctors, psychologists and mental health professionals, listen up! What Moses did here is still good practice! What he is saying here is that the road to healing is always through looking at the problem squarely. Failing to look at problems squarely is the best way to keep them going!
The worst thing you can do, if you have a mysterious lump on your body, is to pretend it isn’t there! You need to pay close attention to it and have a professional examine it carefully and as soon as possible. The worst thing to do is to look the other way and pretend that it isn’t there! Healing begins with noticing!
The worst thing you can do, if you are having financial problems, is to keep on spending and pretending that the problem doesn’t really exist! If you are having such problems, you need to face some hard facts and get some help as soon as possible. The worst thing to do is to look away and pretend the problem does not exist! Recovery begins with facing that which is painful to face, squarely!
The worst thing you can do, if you or one of your friends has a drinking or drug problem, is to look away and pretend that it isn’t there! Reality must be faced squarely and help must be sought as soon as possible. The worst thing to do is to look away and pretend the problem does not exist! Recovery begins with facing facts squarely! That’s why people in AA must first of all say to themselves and others, “I am an alcoholic!” before their healing can begin!
We live in a world that has avoidance down to a fine art! If we don’t like something, we look away! Because if we look at it, it means that we have to do something about it! Nowhere is it more obvious than in the energy crisis. Just drill for more oil instead of facing the facts that doing that just delays the problem!
Nowhere is it more obvious than in the collapse of the housing market, when easy loans where given out to people by greedy lenders who had little chance of paying them off, always with the hope of a government bailout, of course!
Nowhere is it more obvious than the mushrooming credit card debt, when people spend and spend when they can barely pay the interest, even using one credit card to pay the interest on another!
About four weeks ago, I was scheduled to take a nice trip to France to celebration my official retirement. I was about to get on the treadmill for my daily exercise routine when I noticed my left leg was reddish and a bit swollen, but no pain at all. I went to the internet and of course it listed several nightmarish possibilities, one of them being a blood clot. I called my doctor and he said that he didn’t think it could be that since I exercised regularly on a treadmill. His advice was the put my leg up and if it was not better the next day, go to the emergency room and have it tested. Well, the next day it was not better but I worked all day and at about 4:30 I went to Audubon Hospital emergency room. After 6 hours of waiting to get it, I almost decided to give up and go home and hope it all would go away. I decided to stick it out and finally got it tested. It was a large blood clot! They admitted me immediately. I was not allowed to get out of the hospital bed for three days, even to go to the bathroom, lest it dislodge and kill me instantly. To think I might have come home that night or got on a plane for Europe because I did not want to deal with the inconvenience of checking it out! I could be under-ground right now if I had continued in my denial!
Nowhere is denial more obvious than in our national obesity problem. Instead of facing this problem individually, every time we sit down to eat, we keep stuffing our faces with massive amounts of bad food, while we wait for that magic pill that will melt fat away as we sleep. According to Dr. Phil’s massive diet program, for the first time in our history the next generation will die younger than their parents because of obesity related problems.
Moses didn’t put it this way, but this is what he meant – all of us need to “wake up and smell the coffee” in several areas of our lives! As a culture, we are addicted to our denial. Whatever it is, we need to open our eyes and take a good hard look at reality and quit going to sleep just because it is comfortable and feels good for the moment!
And, yes, on a spiritual level, looking at Jesus dying on the cross – looking intently at it and understanding what it means – not looking away and not avoiding our responsibility in considering its implications - is the path to our eternal life as well! We must embrace our crosses and die with him if we are to rise with him to eternal life!
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