Daily Reflection
May 21, 2004

Friday of the Sixth week in Easter
Lectionary: 295
Mike Cherney

You can lock up the bold men
Go and lock up your bold men
And hold men in tow,
You can stifle all adventure
For a century or so.
Smother hope before it’s risen,
Watch it wizen like a gourd,
But you cannot imprison
The Word of the Lord.
       -from Bernstein’s Mass

In today’s readings we see two situations, which are not the best of times for those involved. This is what I think of as “the middle airplane seat syndrome”, a situation where all three parties that are concerned are made uncomfortable. It is particularly difficult for the one in the middle. Paul’s presence creates trouble for both the secular and religious powers.

I wish that I would occasionally receive a message from on high that was as clear and as reinforcing as Paul’s vision. The revelation is fulfilled; nevertheless, given his circumstances, Paul was a very fortunate man. I would have imagined that Gallio would have wanted to keep order. Whether it was a “Jewish dispute” or not, my guess was that order would have been imposed. In different ways, I find myself in the middle seat. The people of power are sitting on both sides and they aren’t happy to see me. Change is hard and people don’t like it, especially when it threatens the source of power. My own observations suggest that the weaker the leader, the more resistant they are to change.

Jesus will present a challenge to both secular and religious authorities just as Paul did. In the Gospel, Jesus forecasts a much more difficult future for himself. He predicts intense suffering followed only later by transcendence over this suffering. The sixteenth chapter of John goes even further. It alludes to the fact that Jesus’ followers will also share in the passion. For the early Christians this was not only a painful, but also a bloody experience. I look at our world and see men and women of faith carrying out great and dangerous acts of heroism. I also am forced to confront my own fears and weaknesses. I note my spiritual failures even in the tasks of daily life.

I pray for the strength to endure the immediate challenges. I pray for faith and patience as we attend the Word of the Lord.

Mike Cherney

Professor Emeritus, Physics Department

I grew up in Milwaukee and have lived in Madison, St. Paul, Hamburg, Geneva, Omaha and Boston. I taught for 27 years in the Creighton Physics Department. Now I am mostly retired and have returned to the Milwaukee area where my wife recently became President of Mount Mary University. I continue to work with Creighton students on projects in high energy nuclear physics at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island and at CERN just outside Geneva, Switzerland. We have two sons and three grandchildren who all live in the northern suburbs of Chicago.

I am a person who asks questions. This often leads me down a challenging path.