Homily for Sept. 5th, 2020: Luke 6:1-5.
“Remember to
keep holy the sabbath day,” is the third of the Ten Commandments. We find them
twice in the Old Testament: in the 20th chapter of Exodus, and in
the 5th chapter of Deuteronomy. Both versions say that we keep the sabbath
holy by refraining from work. Exodus says that the sabbath rest commemorates
God resting on the seventh day after creating the world and everything in it in
six days. Deuteronomy doesn’t mention God resting; but it spells out in greater
detail what Exodus says more briefly: that the sabbath rest is for all, domestic animals as well as humans,
masters and slaves alike: “for you were once slaves in Egypt .”
By Jesus’ day
there was an enormous collection of rabbinical interpretation of this commandment,
distinguishing between forms of work that were lawful on the sabbath, and those
which were unlawful. The controversy continues in Judaism today. Orthodox Jews
walk to the synagogue because they consider it unlawful to drive a car on the sabbath.
Reform Jews reject this rigorism.
In today’s
gospel reading some rigorists criticize Jesus’ disciples for picking heads of
grain on the Sabbath, rubbing them in their hands, and eating them. Jesus
appeals to a precedent in the Jewish Scriptures, when David took bread offered
to God, and which only Jewish priests might eat, and both eating it himself and
offering it to his companions. The precedent was weak: David had not violated
the sabbath rest, though what he had done was illegal according to the law.
Crucial is the
final sentence of our reading: “The Son of Man [a title for Jesus himself] is
lord of the sabbath.” Jesus never abrogated any of God’s laws. But he made
charity the highest law of all. That is why he healed on the sabbath, for
instance. And that is why Pope Francis, celebrating the Mass of the Lord’s
Supper in a prison on the first Holy Thursday after his election disregarded
the liturgical law which says that only the feet of baptized men should be
washed, in order to wash also the feet of some Muslim women. The highest law of
all is charity.
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