Homily for February 13th, 2019: Mark 7:14-23.
“Everything
that goes into a person from outside cannot defile,” Jesus says, since it
enters not into the heart but the stomach.” The heart in Jewish thought was
considered the seat of feelings and learning. The gospel writer Mark adds his
own summary of what Jesus has just said: “Thus he declared all foods clean.”
Jesus’ disciples were all Jews. For
them there was a whole list of foods which not be eaten because they were
unclean, starting with pork. By declaring all foods clean Jesus was making a
radical break with Jewish tradition. But this raises a problem. If Jesus so
clearly abolished the distinction between clean and unclean foods, why was
there the great debate, reported in the Acts of the Apostles and three of
Paul’s letters, about whether Gentile Christians were bound by the Jewish food laws?
The answer to that question is simply: we do not know. There are many things in
the Bible that we cannot understand.
What we can understand is the list of vices that Jesus gives us: evil
thoughts, unchastity, theft, envy, blasphemy, arrogance, folly. Evil thoughts
may be of many kinds: hatred, anger, lust, resentment. The list goes on and on.
All of us have such thoughts from time to time. As long as we are trying to
turn away from such dark thoughts to better ones, our evil thoughts remain only
temptations. And a thousand temptations do not make a single sin. Indeed Jesus
himself was tempted after his 40 days of fasting in the wilderness. Yet we know
that Jesus never sinned.
Theft is forbidden by the
Commandment, “Thou shalt not steal.” Wouldn’t it be wonderful to live in a
world where there was no theft? We wouldn’t need to lock our homes or cars. If
we left something behind, we’d know it would be there when we came back. Could
there be a better example of the Commandments being signposts to human
happiness, not fences to hem us in? Envy is the one vice that brings its own
punishment with it. When we give way to envy, we’re unhappy. Blasphemy is not
respecting the holy name of God. Arrogance puts people off: no one like an
arrogant person. And folly means misusing or wasting the gifts God showers upon
us.
Jesus, who gives us this list of
vices, has also given us the best defense against them: the closing words of
the one prayer he has given us, “Deliver us from evil.”
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