Amen, I say to you,
no prophet is accepted in his own native place.
People in the native place of Jesus might have assumed that they would have received some kind of special treatment in the positive sense. If he he did mighty deeds in Capernaum surely he would do still more in Nazareth. But although he found such expectations placed on him in Nazareth, he didn't find commensurate faith. In Nazareth the people seemed to think Jesus ought to prove himself. He was simply one from among their number, and they knew, or thought they knew his father. Their assumptions made it impossible for them to come before Jesus with receptive humility, which is the only appropriate attitude in his presence.
It was to none of these that Elijah was sent,
but only to a widow in Zarephath in the land of Sidon.
In the same fashion that the people of Nazareth assumed their own worthiness so too did they reject the idea that the Gentiles would be included in God's the blessings of God's covenant. Jesus sensed this in the hearts. But since it was an important part of his plan, accepting Jesus meant a willingness to let him work how and where he willed. Jesus, therefore, didn't avoid the issue. He provoked them by reminding them of an existing pattern in which God blessed the Gentiles rather than those in Israel through Elijah and Elisha, prophets like himself.
It was often the case that it was often the Gentiles who didn't take Jesus for granted, who did not assume they were deserving, and who were able to manifest an attitude of humility in his presence. The Gentiles did not presume they deserved access to the power that was at work in the Lord Jesus. They didn't write him off because they assumed they already knew everything about him. They were thus able to receive more of what Jesus had to offer.
Yet the inclusion of the Gentiles was not merely for their own sake (for our own sake) but also for that of the Jewish people. By showing that he could work where he was welcomed he hoped to provoke a holy jealousy in his covenant people, drawing them beyond their preconceptions and presumptions, inviting them to empty their cups so as to receive all that he did in fact desire to give them.
"My father," they said,
"if the prophet had told you to do something extraordinary,
would you not have done it?
All the more now, since he said to you,
'Wash and be clean,' should you do as he said."
Our expectations are often are our enemies in the spiritual life. We assume that there is one way which in which God works, or that he only works through certain people, or in certain places or situations. And we thus tend to miss all the unexpected places where he is often active, where he often seems to prefer to work. It is very much as if he is challenging us to be open, pushing back against our tendency to slide into familiarity and routine. Sometimes we'd be willing to put up with this if it was accompanied by some extraordinary and miraculous manifestations. But often the unexpected places are simple ones. We don't, for example, often expect great power to work through the Sacraments. They are familiar to us and we think we know the full spectrum of their possibility. But that is exactly the place where, when we are open, we are the most likely to find the transformative and miraculous power of Jesus at work in our midst.






