In today’s Gospel, we meet Jesus as he gathers seventy-two disciples to send out, two by two, with no purse, no sandals, no security. Just peace on their lips and healing in their hands.
Ordinary folks are sent, not just the twelve apostles. The Wednesday group discussed the significance of the number 72. There is no mention that they were scholars, or clergy, or influencers, so I like to think they were simply willing to do it. However, there is a Bible reference that leads us to Moses and the Elders in Numbers 11:16–30, where God instructs Moses to appoint 70 elders to assist him in leading the people.
If that is the true significance of 72, this would suggest Jesus' message being spread to all nations. Then 72 is less of a surprising number. It makes more sense (otherwise, all these pairings are unwieldy). Yet what comes next is a true surprise in this story. The Kingdom of God does not arrive with fanfare or force, but on foot, in pairs, with empty hands and open hearts.
It is also worth noting that these pairs are not sent to the centers of power. Jesus doesn’t give them multi-step church growth strategies. He doesn’t send them with a detailed theology. He sends them as they are, to people and places they do not yet know. They announce a truth that still rings in our ears: “The kingdom of God has come near.”
Questions certainly come from that announcement: What is the kingdom of God, and how near? Reading those words today, I am, at times, baffled in how to answer, and, at times, vocalizing these questions out loud vibrates my soul like a tuning fork.. I have pondered the kingdom of heaven many times in these blog entries. This so-called "commissioning" is not about mission or conversion for me today. Instead, this is a deep spiritual transmission. It’s not doing something for God, but about becoming someone through God. This is a deep call that we all hear in our lives and the world right now.
What Jesus says sounds straightforward: go, take nothing extra, rely on the hospitality of others, proclaim peace, heal, and say “The kingdom of God has come near.” Behind the simplicity is a radical invocation, not to undertake what is to be done in the world, but to be a presence. He sends them to be vulnerable, “like lambs among wolves.” No backup plan, no extra sandals, no purse.
Why? The power of their being sent isn’t in preparation, but rather in being in resonance with the moment. The capacity to be attuned to the peace of Christ, to walk in trust, and to carry not just a message but a field, a spiritual coherence that opens healing and harmony in whatever house is entered.
It is tempting to become consummate "doers" in the world, rushing to fix, speak, or act louder than the many fears we harbor within. Yet we, like the 72, are spiritual beings echoing the vibrations of the Sacred. Our presence alone shifts atmospheres. What Jesus modeled for everyone was not a mystical escapism from death. Jesus embodied a new incarnation of the human spirit.
Too often, especially in chaotic times, we believe only in our time and energy. We feel we should work hard. We must organize more. Our advocacy should be louder. Jesus says something else in this passage.
“Do not move from house to house,” he says, “Let your peace rest upon that house,” and “Rejoice, not that the spirits submit to you, but that your names are written in heaven.”
What if, instead of frantically searching for change, we bring coherence? To stabilize the space around us not by control, but by presence?
These verses speak not of what can be done for the world, but how to show up in life. Not with strategies, but with our frequency and the tone we carry. The tone of grace, calm, and clarity that we can embody when things feel jagged and anxious.
The seventy-two were not effective because they had a better plan or a truer belief than those of the towns they entered. They were effective because they carried peace. The peace that either settled into the hearts of others or returned to the pair undisturbed.
Teilhard de Chardin once said, “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience; we are spiritual beings having a human experience.” If that is true, then our deepest work is not acting for the kingdom of God, but embodying it. This is not done alone, but when we are paired. I struggle with how the world thinks of our individual salvation (see the blog entry about hosannas).
To be in the midst of what’s here without rushing to fix it. To listen before speaking. To bring presence, rather than pressure
Think about Jesus’ final words in this passage: “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven.” Not because the disciples shouted him down. Rather, the kingdom of fear, separation, and domination collapses every time we, paired, choose love over control, peace over panic, and being over performing.
We are sent, not just to proclaim the kingdom, but to be its fields of resonance. We are the waveform, the form made luminous. Spiritual coherence is not an option we may choose; it’s our power. It is what heals, what holds, and what changes things.
So when the world gets loud, resist the urge to get louder. When our world shakes, let's not react by building levels of scaffolding to support it. Let's become the still point. Rather than act on behalf of Life, let's act as Life.
When the seventy-two returned with joy, Jesus didn’t congratulate them for what they did. He rejoiced because they had discovered who they were.
Fields of peace.
Conduits of healing.
Witnesses of the Sacred who lived in harmony and became its embodied agents.