A SECOND CAN
CHANGE A LIFE
INTRODUCTION
The title of this short reflection is, “A Second Can
Change a Life.”
I’m sure that thought has hit us for a second or two at
different times in our life.
I don’t think I gave too many other seconds - or second
thoughts - about that reality, but that’s what hit me when I read today’s
gospel especially.
“A Second Can Change a Life.”
EXAMPLES
A person is driving along alone and their cellphone rings
and they automatically reach for it - and it has shifted to the other side of
the empty other passenger seat - and they look over to see where it is and boom
another person in another car suddenly shifts lanes in that split second.
A second can change a life.
A doctor is looking at x-rays all morning - and says to herself
or himself, “Wait a second. Let me look at this x-ray again?” And in that second opinion - in that second
look - they spot something they didn’t spot in the first look.
A second can change a life.
A person in a moment of anger yells at us as we both come
around a corner in the supermarket and almost crash into each other. One person
yells, “You jerk. Why don’t you watch where you’re going?” One person bites
their tongue and says nothing.
A second can change a life.
DEMONS
On second thought, perhaps the reason I got this thought
from today’s gospels was the word, “demon”.
In today’s gospel we hear the scribes - they are those who can write - the more
educated ones - attacking Jesus for being possessed by Beelzebub - a great name
for the so called, “Prince of Demons”.
In Jesus’ time, people used the word “demons.” They were
spurts, blurts, darts of anger and frustration and irrationality that erupted
out of people - sort of all of a sudden - and in a split second - a person
threw a rock or a word at another.
They are what causes division in a house or a family or a
marriage or a community.
And often we have to live with the consequences of a
split second act or action.
If it’s bad stuff - it’s called a demon - a devil - and
because it’s filled with energy - it’s also seen as a “bad god” - a bad spirit
- let loose.
BRUDERHOFF
I was once attending a talk being given by a member of
the Bruderhoff - a Protestant Community - Commune - in upstate New York. The
talk was being given in a convent to some nuns and I was invited.
The father of a family was explaining what life was like
in his family and in his commune. Seated near him were his wife and about 4
kids.
It was a long talk and it got boring. Above the speaker was a ceiling fan with a
metal beaded cord - with a bigger bead at the bottom - to grab to turn the fan
on or off - or to put it in another cycle.
Suddenly in a split second one of his sons stood up - and
whacked with one hand the bottom bead of the on off cord hanging from the
ceiling fan. It went flying. It stopped the father for a moment. Everyone saw
it. Everyone woke up. The boy simply sat down and continued his day dreaming.
The father continued speaking. The father finished speaking. Any questions?
Nobody said anything to the boy who wacked that ceiling fan cord.
I have never forgotten that scene.
I often wondered what was going on in that kid’s mind.
I’ve often wondered why we remember what we remember and
forget so many other moments of life.
It has always struck me - that maybe all of us are
sitting there in church - at the dinner
table - at a meeting - or in a relationship - and we want to scream - or
smack some hanging cord.
It has always struck me that any of us can do something
stupid - dumb in a split second - and it can ruin the rest of the evening or
one’s life.
CONCLUSION
Today’s gospel also talks about non-forgiveness…..hopefully
it’s not everlasting ….
Hopefully, if we do something dumb in a second, we can
recover and do something smart in a second and recover.