These days there is no shortage of devices to take photographs and videos. We have albums upon albums of memories: a newborn, the baptism, the first bicycle ride without training wheels, pictures of the school years, dropping that young adult at college, the wedding, and the pictures of the newborn. We record the person growing into an independent life. It is a visual record of a mantle being passed on as the child takes on the mantle of an adult.
A mantle – a loose sleeveless garment worn over other clothes. The mantle symbolizes authority, as in accepting the mantle of leadership. When Elijah went over to him and threw his cloak over him. Elisha left the oxen, ran after Elijah” we see the beginning of a period of preparation for Elisha’s eventual taking on the full mantle of the prophet, the servant of the Word of God.
Somewhere in your collection of pictures, I bet there is one of you and your baptismal gown. I love that part of the baptismal liturgy that comes after the pouring of the baptismal wates: You have put on Christ; in Him you have been baptized. See in this white garment, the outward sign of the inner dignity given you. And with the help of family and friends, may you bring that dignity unstained into everlasting life. It is an Elijah-Elisha moment: the mantle begins to be passed from parent-to-child. The child will follow the parent who teaches, forms, molds, and shapes the person the child will be. It is a great responsibility, a wondrous undertaking. It is a mantle we all wear in one way or another as we prepare ourselves and the generation that follows.
There are many “mantles.” How is it that we wear that mantle of our faith in our homes, families, places of work, or parish? Perhaps we wear it loosely, and without a great deal of thought, except during the time we spend at church on Sunday. Maybe we wear it boldly…. but comes the time when that mantle of responsibility begins to weigh upon us, then we feel its constraints, its burden, and its demands. Perhaps in that moment we lay it to one side for a moment. It might be the briefest of times when the words around us are cruel, racists, judgmental, or other-than-what-we-deeply-believe. In our silence when we don’t want to rock the boat, upset someone, or bear the brunt of the next wave of prejudicial utterances. It is then that the mantle is worn loosely to the point of falling aside.
In our baptism and profession of faith, have been given a responsibility to speak as though a prophet – like Elijah, like St. Paul, like so many before us
- to speak truth to power,
- to speak hope into a situation of despair,
- to be joyful among the world’s tears, or
- to reach out to embrace those in the world deemed un-huggable.
And, yes, there are times when those prophetic moments are the cross we are called to pick up. “If anyone wishes to come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me.” Not just pick it up and endure it, but “follow.”
Sometimes the call comes to us as it did to St. Paul – uninvited, yet compelling. Sometimes, in our enthusiasm, we proclaim: “I will follow you wherever you go.” Sometimes that is what we want to be able to say to Jesus… and yet we are challenged to be honest with ourselves: are there limits to what we will do in following Jesus? Perhaps our answer is “Yes, Lord…. But here’s the thing… once I get my career on track, my family established, my education complete…” And the thing is that we don’t even know what God would ask of us. Maybe it is to get a career on track in order to be a witness in the world of business. Or be married and instill within the family deep true Christian values that can withstand the witness of secular values.
The call begins in the waters of baptism with the mantle of faith laid on our shoulders. Here many years later, it is good to more closely consider the mantles. I can pause to consider the mantles of my baptism, my Franciscan vows, my priestly life, the mantle of my role in my family – and so many more. They all combine into one.
But at the core, the question remains, “Is it the mantle rooted in our baptism in Christ?” Or is it a multi-colored cloak in which we have a little of this, a little of that, having pieced together “what works for me.” Having pieced together, what does not take away my options, my choices, my freedom. Isn’t that what St Paul says? We are “called for freedom” …and then interestingly he does not give us a list of choices. He describes the freedom of Christ as service to one another through love. “For the whole law is fulfilled in one statement, namely, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”
And maybe that is the intense urgency in Jesus’ command to “Follow me” – every delay or side trip – in their own way – is love delayed. “Yes Lord, I will follow…but here’s the thing… Once I get this other task started/completed/whatever – then I will more fully love you.”
We are called to follow. We have no idea about the journey to which we are called. But we do know that despite its ups and downs, it will be a journey of love. And so we take up the mantle and we follow Christ.
It is a mantle of love – it is the white garment that is but the outward sign of the great dignity given us. May we bring that dignity unstained into ever-lasting life.