Saturday, August 28, 2021

Bible Reflections I 29.08.2021 - Sunday I Indraya Manna I

Ordinary Time - Week 22

Readings 
   I - Deu. 4: 1-2, 6-8
 II - Jas. 1:17-18, 21-22,27   
III - Mk. 7: 1-8

Beheading of John the Baptist (Memoria)

ALIGN YOUR LIFE UNTO THE COMMANDMENT OF GOD

The simple two dimensional law viz. the love of God and the love of neighbour was complicated by the observance of 613 laws, fabricated by the religious leaders, made the life of a Jew difficult and burdensome. The Scribes and the Pharisees thus “preserved” the law but diluted the essence of the law, the one commanded by God: Love. Anything against the love of God and love of neighbour is impure in the sight of God. They considered themselves as the ‘people of God’, a race after God’s choice and never associated especially with the outcast. Whenever they went out, after their return they would wash their hands so that they remain pure untarnished by their association with the outcast. An inhuman act indeed! And a great abomination in the sight of God because the love of neighbour is jeopardised in the bargain.      

In today’s Gospel passage, the Scribes and the Pharisees accuses the disciples of Jesus for not washing their hands. Jesus admonishes their hypocrisy because they were putting aside the commandment of God and were clinging on to human traditions that hurt and neglected one section of the society on the whole. Nothing that goes into a man from outside can make him unclean but the evil that comes from within viz. theft, murder, adultery, avarice, pride, folly… make him unclean. The first reading speaks about the importance of keeping the word of the Lord, as people of God and in the second reading, St. James exhorts the Christians to be the ‘doers of the Word’ that has the power to save souls. Aligning oneself according to the Word of the Lord therefore is purity and that is religion.

There are people who go on a pilgrimage to holy places, fast for days together, perform all rituals under the pretext of ‘devotion’, parade themselves to be religious people but never give a cup of water to the thirsty, feed the hungry, care for the widow and the orphaned, help the poor or defend the voiceless. Through today’s Gospel passage Jesus rebukes these type of people for their hypocrisy and invites them to concentrate on the higher values of life. Let us not fall into this category of hypocrites but become doers of God and this is of course purity, and pleasing in the sight of God. Today the Church remembers the beheading of St. John the Baptist, voice in the desert that demanded everyone to live by the word of the Lord. May St. John the Baptist give us the courage to stand by God’s Word at all circumstances with courage and conviction.