Homily for August 16th,
2013: Matt. 19:3-12
“Is it lawful
for a man to divorce his wife?” Jesus is asked in today’s’ gospel reading.
Jesus responds not by an appeal to law, but by reminding his questioners of
what God did in creation. “From the
beginning the Creator made them male and female and said, For this reason a man
shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh”
-- something possible only for people of different genders. Divorce, Jesus says, was never part of God’s plan. It originated “because of the
hardness of your hearts” – in other words, as a result of sin.
There is
hardly a family today which is not touched in some measure by divorce. Despite
talk about “no fault divorce”, it is always painful. How could it be otherwise
when marriage is the union of a man and a woman “in one flesh”? The ending of such a one-flesh relationship is comparable to the amputation
of a limb.
Since Jesus
refers his questioners to the Creation story, it’s worth looking back at the
first two chapters of Genesis. In chapter one God says after each stage of
creation: “It is good.” After making man and woman together, he tells them: “Be
fruitful and multiply” (Gen 1:28). Parenthood is thus the first purpose of
marriage. And only a man and a woman can fulfill that purpose. At the end of
that first chapter, God looks at all he has made and says: “It is very good”
(vs. 31).
The first
thing that God looks at in Creation and says, “It is not good” is loneliness:
“It is not good for the man to be alone,” we read in Genesis 2, verse 18. The
creation of woman follows. Her fashioning from the man’s rib is of course a
pre-scientific tale. But it shows that woman was made to complete man. The two
sexes were not made for rivalry: domination on the one hand manipulation on the other. That came about through sin. They were created by
God to complete and support one another. That is the second reason for
marriage.
Mindful, then,
of Jesus teaching, we pray in this Mass especially for married couples who are
are experiencing difficulties or stress in their marriages; that God, for whom
all things are possible, will help them to remain faithful.
No comments:
Post a Comment