Back
in the 16th century, in the aftermath of the European conquest of
the “New World,” the Dominican theologian Francisco di Vitoria [1492-1546] pointed out what he called “many
scandals and cruel crimes and acts of impiety,” that accompanied – and in his
view undermined - the attempt to evangelize the Native American population. He
wrote: “It does not appear that the Christian religion has been preached to
them with such sufficient propriety and piety that they are bound to acquiesce
in it.” Then as now, scandal and sin obscured the Gospel’s message and
undermined the Church’s mission.
Nowadays it is moral failures and failures of leadership primarily on the part of those of us who publicly represent the Church that have scandalously
disfigured the Body of Christ, obscured the Gospel’s message, and undermined the
Church’s mission. Meanwhile, in this terrible time of testing for the Church,
opposing factions within the Church are attacking each other with even more
than the usual ferocity, mimicking the hyperpolarization we see in secular
society, further obscuring the Gospel’s message and undermining the Church’s
mission. As the great 20th-century American convert-theologian Avery
Dulles [1918-2008] once warned, "A polarized society
simply cannot attract new members or new leaders of high quality."
The situation recorded in today’s Gospel [Mark 7:1-8,14-15,21-23] between Jesus and the Pharisees was somewhat
different. For one thing, the Pharisees themselves were for the most part good
people with the best of motives. The
Pharisees were one of several factions in 1st-century Jewish life.
Other major factions included the somewhat aristocratic Sadducees (who were the
Temple priests), the Zealots (who wanted to liberate Israel from Roman rule),
the Essenes (who lived a quasi-monastic life in the desert), and then, later in
the century, those who believed Jesus was the Messiah and had risen from the
dead, the faction that came to be known as Christians.
The
Pharisees in Jesus’ time were committed to take religious observance as
seriously as possible, while combining that with life in society. They promoted
a day-to-day spirituality, that sought to make the Law come alive in daily
experience, relating its commandments to the various spheres of life, and so
living an active, involved life but remaining - as Saint James says in today’s
2nd reading [James 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27] -
unstained by the world.
In
Jesus’ time, the Pharisees’ zeal and dedication were widely recognized,
Although not a Pharisee himself, Jesus engaged in discussions with Pharisees
and accepted dinner invitations to Pharisees’ homes. Nonetheless, the Gospel
reports that Jesus also sometimes had some very harsh words for the Pharisees.
What Jews call the Torah - the statutes
and decrees Moses taught the people to
observe - was God’s gift to Israel, a sign of God’s special closeness to
his people even in the regular routines of daily life. It challenged the people
to become wise and intelligent enough
to observe it, and so serve as a
witness to the nations. The
Pharisees’ problem was that, while the Law was supposed to be a special sign of
God’s closeness, here was God himself present in Jesus, but the experts in the law were completely
missing the point.
In
their desire to build what was called a “Fence around the Law,” the Pharisees, who, like Jesus
himself, were all laypeople, not Temple priests, had apparently adopted
rigorous rules of ritual purification that applied primarily to the Temple
priests - thus taking seriously the biblical image of all Israel as in some
special sense a priestly people. The evangelist, trying to explain all this to
his 1st-century Gentile Christian audience, emphasized that this tradition of the elders represented a
human addition to God’s commandments.
The Gospel clearly portrays Jesus as a higher authority than the Pharisees when
it comes to the interpretation and application of what God commands as opposed
to merely human custom.
Identifying
what is essential to living an authentic Christian moral life, sorting that out
from the human and cultural envelope within which we inevitably receive it, is –
always has been, and will always remain – a constant challenge for as long as
the good news of Jesus brings new people from every nation, culture, and
language into his Church.
This
becomes especially challenging in times of significant and rapid cultural
change such as we have been living through in our lifetimes. The family, for
example, as a social institution is radically different from what family was a
century ago. In addition to traditional extended families and modern nuclear
families, we also have single-parent families, multi (i.e., more than 2) parent
families, blended families, childless families, and individuals single by
choice. Identifying what is essential for an authentic Christian moral life,
sorting that out amid the many human and cultural envelopes we have inherited -
or adopted – is no small challenge, especially since so much depends on really
getting it right.
On
the other hand, creating and maintaining some sort of recognizable cultural
envelope – a sort of “Fence around the Law” - within which one can live a moral
life in community with others and that can be passed on to the next generation
is also important. Some – not all, but some - of the difficulties we have
experienced in recent decades have certainly been exacerbated by discovering
how fragile the cultural envelope we inherited has been in practice, leaving us
less certain and less confident about how to proceed. Sorting out which of what
today’s Gospel calls human traditions are best suited to foster an authentic
life in today’s context is one of the greatest challenges we face going
forward.
How
we navigate our way through these opposing challenges matters, lest we delude ourselves, as James warned us
against in today’s 2nd reading. If anything, Jesus actually
challenged his hearers to an even more demanding standard. Listen to the list
of sins Jesus warned against: evil
thoughts, unchastity, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit,
licentiousness, envy, blasphemy, arrogance, folly. (Imagine if we all gave
up folly!)
In
Jesus, God has become present to transform us into the priestly people which
the Law was meant to signal, to turn us around, to turn our entire lives
around, to authentic, life-long, day-in, day-out discipleship – or, as James
more poetically expressed it, that we
might be a kind of first fruits of his creatures.
Homily for the 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, September 2, 2018.
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