Law and communion: homily for the twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time

Homily for the 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

If you could pick eight of the Ten Commandments to follow and drop two, which would they be?  What if you could keep six as commandments and downgrade four to recommendations?  Perhaps you’re thinking, “I probably only need about five or so, but I know a lot of people who could use a few more, maybe 12 or 15 for them.”  The Pharisees in the Gospel seem to have adopted this last strategy, and perhaps because of their bad example sometimes the very idea of law gets a bad rap.  Didn’t Jesus teach grace rather than law, mercy instead of rules?  Didn’t Jesus say, “All you need is love, love is all you need”?  

Actually, that was the Beatles.  Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount:  “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets.  I have come not to abolish but to fulfill.  Amen, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law.”

Basilica de Santo Nino, Cebu City, Philippines

Now it is true that, as in today’s Gospel reading, Jesus harshly criticizes a certain way of using the law as self-serving and hypocritical.  So to be disciples of Jesus we need to think carefully about the role the law plays in salvation history and in our own lives of faith.  

Today’s first reading from Deuteronomy makes clear that the law of Israel is God’s gift.  It makes equally clear that no one but God may add to or subtract from what he commands.  No matter how much we find the commandments hard to follow, no matter how old they are, no matter if we think we could attract crowds of new people to our Church by loosening the loopholes, only God can modify the law of God.  

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Be made clean: Homily for the Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time (B)

Five years ago, if we had read this passage from Leviticus, we might have looked rather harshly at the Old Testament rules for the treatment of lepers.  Making a man shout “Unclean, unclean!” and dwell apart, outside the camp—quarantined—might have seemed unenlightened.  

Church of St. Ignatius (ceiling), Rome

Four years ago, about this time of year, all those purity laws in Leviticus started to look a lot more familiar.  We made each other dwell apart outside the camp, in quarantine, not because a scab or pustule or blotch had appeared, but because it might, you never know, you can never be too safe.  Suddenly those purity laws were not so unreasonable after all.

When we read the Gospel, we usually imagine that of course we would take the side of Jesus instead of the Pharisees.  But I wonder.  Look at Jesus in today’s Gospel passage.  No six feet of social distancing, no mask, no respect for the opinion of the experts, touching the infected without hand sanitizer before or after—would we really take the side of Jesus?

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