Reflection for Saturday, September 6, 2003: 22nd week in Ordinary Time.

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Rodriguez, Luis, S.J.

Issue Date

2003-09-06

Volume

Issue

Type

Essay

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Today's gospel scene brings back old childhood memories of my dad, my brother and myself walking alongside fields of still green wheat and picking some ears to eat the soft milky grains. No one ever accused us of stealing. After all, what is a few ears in a whole field of wheat? As a matter of fact stealing was not the point of the Pharisees' reproach either. Their point was the (to them) unacceptable objective violation of an established religious norm of behavior -or, at least, of their interpretation of that norm.||That is precisely what Jesus rejects: the absolutizing of norms regardless of context, of proportion or of human need; the placing of norms above people. And he reminds them of one case in their own respected tradition, where David, a lay person, acted in objective violation of a clear religious norm by unlawfully eating of the bread reserved for priests -David, "a man after God's own heart."[1Sam. 13:14]|| When we absolutize norms, we do not feel we have any need to make allowances for special circumstances: upbringing, personal acumen, sickness, need, emergencies... Absolutizing tricks us into feeling excused from using compassion, understanding, even common sense (arguably the least common of senses.) We need to remain aware that, in Jesus' mind, the Sabbath and other religious norms are for people and not vice versa. [Mk. 2:27]. I am convinced that we could diffuse much of the current internal tensions in the Church, if we had the attitude Jesus displays in today's gospel scene toward religious norms or guidelines. If we can learn vicariously from historically recent situations, the rigid literalism of the Taliban leaders might offer us some pause for reflection.

Description

Citation

Publisher

University Ministry, Creighton University.

License

These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

Lectionary number: 436

ISSN

EISSN