Readings:
1 Sam 16:1-13 • Psalm 89 • : Mk 2:23-28
What a wonderful Gospel passage, where Mark clearly shows the New Testament fulfilling the Old.
Mark tells us that
Jesus and the disciples were walking through a wheat field on the Sabbath; and
as they walked the disciples picked the heads of grain and ate them.
Several places in Exodus, Leviticus, and
Deuteronomy apply here. In fact, the Law allows the gleaning, or picking grain
from another’s field [Dt 23:25], but only with your hand. Pick just enough to
satisfy your hunger. You can’t roll through someone else’s field with a
combine. Then there are the Ten Commandments, requiring the observation of the
Sabbath day by doing no work [Ex 20:10; Dt 5:12-15].
The Pharisees, of course, were shadowing
Jesus, intent on finding fault, so they challenged Him, asking why His
disciples were violating the Law. As usual, they interpreted the Law narrowly,
but Jesus, as usual, turned the tables on them.
Jesus began by criticizing their
ignorance of Scripture: “Have you not read what David did…?” Here He
referred to the 1st Book of Samuel. David and his companions were
fleeing King Saul. Hungry, David approached the priests of the sanctuary at Nob
and requested bread. But the only bread available was the Bread of the
Presence, which, by Law, was reserved for priests alone [Lev 24:9]. But Abiathar, the high priest, gave the bread to
David. In his anger, Saul later slaughtered the priests at Nob, not because he
thought they had violated the Law, but because they had helped David.
Jesus uses this event to explain the true meaning of the Sabbath, that the letter of the Law is not more important than helping those in real need. The letter of the Law might be violated, but not the good the Law intends. Jesus summed it up:
“The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath” [Mk 2:27].
God instituted the Sabbath, Jesus reminded the Pharisees, not for its own sake, but for our benefit. For Jesus the deepest intention of the Law is not to bind us but to set us free. How did He put it? The truth will set you free. When you think about it, this isn’t surprising. Surely God wants to set you and me free: our freedom is God's gift. Did not Jesus come “to set captives free” (Lk 4:18)?
And then Our Lord said something
remarkable:
“The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath” [Lk 6:5].
Mark doesn’t reveal the Pharisees’
reaction to these words, but they must have been horrified. For them this was
blasphemy. Using the Messianic title “Son of Man” was bad enough, but He
also claimed the divine title, “Lord of the Sabbath.” Yes, Jesus in
effect proclaimed His divinity, as He who gave the Law to Israel, the Lord of
the Sabbath, with authority over the Law, over creation.
In our first reading from 1 Samuel, we
encounter the young David, a shepherd, the seventh and least likely of Jesse’s
sons. And yet, he is God’s choice. He will become the greatest of the kings of
God’s People, and a type of Jesus Himself.
This is the David Jesus praises to the
Pharisees who have conveniently forgotten the true meaning of God’s Law, the
David who act points a thousand years ahead to the Lord of the Sabbath.
Perhaps, you and I should consider how
we celebrate the Sabbath, the day on which we proclaim Jesus’ glorious
Resurrection. Other than taking part in a vigil or Sunday Mass, what do we do
to keep the day holy? Is it just another day to spend on the golf course, or in
front of the TV?
Or do we take time to help those who are
far from free, perhaps the lonely, the homebound neighbor with no family and
few friends, someone who yearns for a visit and for words of kindness.
And like the disciples, do we also take
some time to walk with Jesus, to talk with Jesus, to pray with Jesus on the day
He has declared holy?
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