February 12th,
2019: Mark 7:1-13
“You
hypocrites,” Jesus says in the gospel. He spoke those words not to open and
notorious sinners, but to Pharisees: people who prided themselves on their
exact fulfillment of God’s law. He condemns them with words taken from the
prophet Isaiah: “This people honors me with their
lips, but their hearts are far from me; in vain do they worship me, teaching as
doctrines human precepts.”
Jesus follows these words with an example of what he is talking about.
You Pharisees, he says, are careful to obey purely human rules (washing of
cups, cleansing of your hands after you return from a shopping expedition). Yet
you explain away the fifth of God’s Ten Commandments: “Honor your father and
mother” by saying, “If someone says to father or mother, ‘Any support
you might have had from me is qorban' (meaning, dedicated to God), you allow him to do nothing
more for his father or mother. You nullify the word of God in favor of your
tradition that you have handed on.”
Who are today’s Pharisees? They are people who think they can earn rewards from God. In reality, God’s love and our salvation are
not things we can earn. They are God’s free
gift. God bestows his gifts on us not because we are good enough, but
because He is so good that he wants
to share his love with us. God’s law is not the list of rules and regulations
that we must first obey before God will love us and bless us. God’s law is,
rather, the description of our grateful
response to the love and blessing which God has already bestowed on us out
of sheer generosity.
Does this mean that there is no “just
reward” for those who do try to obey God’s law? Of course not. God’s reward for
faithful service is certain. Jesus tells us this in many gospel passages. He
warns us, however, that those who try to calculate their reward in advance will
be disappointed. The people who are most richly rewarded – who are literally
bowled over by God’s generosity – are those who never stop to reckon up their
reward because they are so keenly aware of how far short they still fall of
God’s standard.
If we want to experience God’s
generosity (and is there anyone here who does not?), we must learn to stand
before God with empty hands. Then we shall experience the joy of Mary, who in
her greatest hour, when she learned – astonished, fearful, and confused – that
she was to be the mother of God’s Son, responded with words which the Church
repeats in its public prayer every evening:
“The hungry he has given every good
thing,
while the rich he has sent empty away” (Lk 1:53).
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