Readings: Isaiah 10:5-7, 13b-16; Ps 94; Matthew 11:25-27
A lesson in school many years ago has stayed with me ever since.
It was one of my first lessons in commerce, as it was called, or business studies, I suppose, later on. In this lesson we were told that the two most powerful words in advertising are the words new and free. Although that was many years ago, it seems to be still the case, judging from the frequency with which products have these words attached to them, new and free.
The good news about Jesus is new and it is free. God is ever new and always free. And so the message about Jesus, the message about God, ought to be the easiest product in the world to sell.
So what is it about children that allows them to receive this news when the learned and the clever cannot? Well, one thing, I suppose, is their openness to novelty. The Irish poet Patrick Cavanagh has a lovely phrase in his poem about Advent when he talks about the wonder there was in every stale thing when we looked at it as children. There's a sense of wonder and adventure, of possibility and hope in the life and in the eyes of the child, a wonder which too many adults, unfortunately, lose.
And in children we see great freedom. Also, we admire it, envy it perhaps, the freedom and spontaneity of the child, their ease in calling a spade a spade. They're not yet fixed in their ways.
They haven't become experienced in the world's currencies. And so there is a kind of trustingness, an openness, a readiness to learn in the child. Of course, there are dangers in this of which we've become only too aware in recent years.
But it is still something that we admire in the child, a freedom, an openness and a trust. The older folks among us become learned and clever in the ways of the world become experienced. And it becomes more difficult then for them to receive Christ, the message of Christ, with wonder and with freedom.
Augustine, in his Confessions, has a famous passage in which he laments that it was late that he loved God. 'Late have I loved you, O beauty ever ancient and ever new.' He was converted at 32.
He's writing at the age of 45. Late have I loved you, O beauty ever ancient and ever new. So as life proceeds and many things happen, and our sense of wonder and our sense of freedom are both challenged by the experiences of life, it's crucial to remember that Jesus is talking about a spiritual childhood, a readiness, an openness, a freedom, which allows entry into the kingdom of God.
He's talking about the level of life in the spirit, as Paul speaks so eloquently about that in Romans chapter 8. Not about chronological age then, but about a disposition of the spirit, where we find a sense of wonder and freedom, not in ourselves, but in God, living a theological life, a God-centred life. God who is ever ancient, but ever new. God who is absolutely faithful and yet infinitely free.
That's the source of our freedom, of our openness to what is new, if we live a life that is theological, rooted in God, ever ancient and ever new, absolutely faithful and infinitely free. A God of surprises then. Children, of course, love surprises.
Adults tend to become apprehensive and suspicious about surprises. But we must be ready for new things as we seek to follow the way of Christ. We must be ready for new freedoms that we did not suspect, even in our maturity.
You can listen here to this homily being preached.