In
this month's liturgical Bible study, we examine the covenant
as the dominant theme of the Bible. You could say it is
the fundamental plot of the Scriptures-the element that
propels the story to its conclusion. God and man's pursuit
of a covenant relationship drives the disparate stories
of the Old and New Testaments. The biblical understanding
of a covenant is a family or blood bond that is contracted
by an oath sworn before witnesses, often with an accompanying
spilling of blood to signify the kind of bond that has
been formed. It is perpetually binding and can only expire
when one of the parties to the covenant dies.
The
question at the heart of man is essentially a convenantal
question. What is our destiny and purpose-How do we enter
into this covenant with God-into this communion of love?
The sacraments that Christ gives us in the Church provide
the answer. We might say that the sacraments form the
final act of the covenantal drama with the concluding
scene being the eternal, covenantal embrace with God in
heaven. The lifeblood of our covenantal family is the
sanctifying grace given through the sacraments. In the
readings for the 24th Sunday of the year, we see that
the covenantal family has been extended beyond the chosen
people of Israel to the whole human family. A loving Father
has prepared the Eucharistic feast of His Son for all
those who will come to Him for mercy.
Exodus
32:7-11, 13-14
These
Scripture passages recount one of the central scenes of
the Old Testament, and yet its significance is often overlooked.
Moses Maimonides, the revered 12th-century philosopher
and rabbi who has been called "the second Moses,"
points to the incident of the golden calf as a turning
point in the life of Israel. He is not alone among commentators
in suggesting that the complicated ceremonial requirements
of the Mosaic Law (amounting to 613 precepts) are the
result of this breach of faith on the part of the newly
liberated Israelites. St. Thomas Aquinas, who was influenced
by the work of the Jewish rabbi Maimonides, likewise saw
the Mosaic Law as a punitive law or a punishment for the
worship of the golden calf. (See S. Th. I-II, Q. 102,
Art. 3).
St.
Paul may well have been thinking in the same manner when
in Galatians 3 and 4 he speaks of the Sinai Covenant as
consisting of a kind of provisional or temporary slavery
(cf. 3:23; 4:24). This would explain why Paul is so opposed
to the "works of the law" (Rom. 3:28) and "the
written code [that] kills" (2 Cor. 3:6) from which
he insists we have been set free by Christ.
What
is so horrible about the worship of the golden calf that
it precipitates 1,300 years of a legal system that served,
according to St. Paul, as a custodian or guardian "until
that descendant of offspring came to whom the promise
had been given" (Gal. 3:19)? The Egyptians and the
Canaanites worshipped bull or calf deities as symbols
of fertility, wealth, and power. Yahweh, on the other
hand, who has just led the Jewish people out of Egypt
"with a strong hand," displayed power on a scale
that demonstrated He is not merely a power in nature,
but the power behind all nature. He is the God of gods
who defeated the powerful gods of Egypt. It has been suggested
that the 10 plagues prior to the Exodus were precisely
judgments upon the nature deities of Egypt.
But,
cast into doubt by Moses' long absence on Mt. Sinai, the
people have Aaron form the likeness of a calf as an object
of worship. "In their hearts they turned to Egypt"
(Acts 7:39). In spite of all that God had done for the
Israelites, they fell back on the familiar patterns of
their former lives in slavery to Egypt. To paraphrase
the old adage, better the slavery you know than the freedom
you don't. Ironically, Yahweh seems to have said, in effect,
"If you want to live like slaves, you will, but you
will be slaves to a law that Moses will give you rather
than to the gods of Egypt."
Do
we fall into the same sins as did Israel? Do we fail in
faith by relying on our own power or the power that we
can derive from nature, rather than giving ourselves in
loving trust to God?
1
Timothy 1:12-17
In
this reading, St. Paul perfectly exemplifies the necessity
of our depending not on our own power but on the mercy
of God. Paul suggests that Christ has used him so that
"I might become an example."
Interestingly,
Paul represents in a kind of typological way the whole
of Israel. His fierce loyalty to the Law and the God of
the Law had led him to reject the claims of Christ. He
was struck blind on the Damascus Road and heard Jesus
identify Himself with the Church: "I am Jesus, the
one you are persecuting" (Acts 9:5). Later he will
say of Israel, "they are zealous for God though their
zeal is unenlightened" and "blindness has come
upon part of Israel" (Rom. 10:2; 11:25). Christ blinded
Paul for a time so that Paul might see in a new way when
he received the Gospel. In Acts 9:15, God tells Ananias
that Paul "is the instrument I have chosen to bring
my name to the Gentiles." Just as Israel had served
to reveal the name of God to all the peoples of the world,
so too would Paul the Israelite.
Israel
proved time and again to be unworthy of the task God set
before her. Likewise, Paul protests that he is the worst
of sinners-in spite of the exalted task set before him.
We, too, have received our salvation and faith without
any merit on our part. All is grace. In spite of our sin,
we have been chosen and grafted onto Israel. Israel is
rightly proud of its irrevocable status as the chosen
people, and we also are proud of all the wonderful things
that we have been given as Catholics. We fall into blindness,
however, when we begin to think that these gifts are ours
by right and not by grace. If we fail to give glory to
God for His gifts, we also fail to be "an example
to those who would later have faith in him and gain everlasting
life."
Luke
15:1-32
The
story of the prodigal son has become a veritable icon
of the Father's universal mercy. This commentary on it,
however, will focus on the mercy received by the Gentiles-those
of us who are not of Jewish blood.
There
is good reason to believe that Luke uses this story as
a parable of the eventual offer of salvation to the Gentiles.
Luke, while vitally interested in the Jewish aspects of
the Gospel, is also speaking to a wider audience. In his
Gospel he shows a dual interest-Israel's story represents
for Luke the key to the rest of the world's story. Luke's
situating of the Gospel within Roman history in 2:1 and
3:1 and tracing Jesus' genealogy back to Adam are just
two manifestations of this wider, international interest.
In
the discourses of Jesus, Luke has Him shifting back and
fourth between addresses to the Pharisees, a rigorous
Jewish sect, and the disciples or the crowds who gather
to hear Him. The latter groups often are shown to include
public sinners, which scandalizes the Pharisees. The parables
delivered to the Pharisees frequently highlight the special
relationship of Israel to God, and so are more familial
in tone with kinship to Abraham being stressed. The discourses
and parables that Jesus delivers to the "less righteous"
tend to present a relationship with God analogous to a
relationship between a master and his servants, rather
than that within a family.
Hence,
Jesus says to the Pharisees that the kingdom is "in
your midst," (Lk. 17:21), that is, right within Israel.
But He says to the disciples that the kingdom is to be
received, as though it were a thing given or entered from
the outside (cf. Lk. 16:16; 17:17). Speaking in broad
terms, the Pharisees and other officials seem to represent
the people of Israel through whom the Gospel has come,
while the disciples and sinners seem to represent those
to whom the Gospel has come. Even though the disciples
may have been entirely Jewish, they take on the role of
standing in for the wider Gentile world to whom Luke knows
the Gospel will be spread.
The
parable of the prodigal son is told to an audience of
Pharisees, but with tax collectors and sinners gathered
around as well. Jesus first tells two stories about leaving
the 99 to search for the one lost sheep, and another about
sweeping the house to find the one lost silver piece out
of 10. Then, Jesus tells the story of a father who had
two sons, one of them the prodigal. The value of the lost
item increases with each story. In logic this would be
called an a fortiori argument or an appeal to the stronger
or weightier case. If a sheep or a coin is worth the struggle
to save it, certainly a human soul-still more, a son's
soul-is worth nothing less.
Again,
the element of the family is present, as is usually the
case in this section of Luke when Jesus is talking to
Pharisees. But when the prodigal returns he tells his
father that he deserves to be treated like a servant rather
than a son. That is, there is something here also for
the disciples and sinners who are listening. The father
in the story refers twice to the son as having been formerly
"dead" and having "come back to life."
This calls to mind the warning that Moses had issued to
Israel about keeping the covenant before entering the
Promised Land in Deuteronomy 30:19: "I have set before
you life and death, blessing and curse; therefore choose
life, that you and your descendants may live."
Indeed,
the prodigal leaves the family and thereby falls into
the position of a servant, the same as that of someone
who is dead or outside the covenant family of Israel.
This is the servant status of those whom Jesus addresses
in Luke's Gospel who find themselves outside of the covenant-the
Gentiles, tax collectors, and sinners, the crowds who
listen to Jesus. The prodigal son is so downcast that
he finds himself tending pigs, an unclean animal to the
Jews which precisely signifies loss of covenant status.
Another
element of this story highlights Jesus' message to those
who are outside of the covenant family. The land where
the prodigal goes in search of a high time experiences
a famine. The famine is a stock literary device in Genesis,
occurring in the lifetimes of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
(Gen. 12, 26, 42). In those stories, however, famine strikes
Israel, forcing the patriarchs to leave their land and
go to Egypt. (The story of Isaac is significant in that
he doesn't leave for Egypt, but trusts in Yahweh to supply
his needs in the Promised Land.) In the case of the prodigal,
however, the situation is reversed. He experiences famine
in a foreign land and returns home for food. This suggests
that his situation is just the opposite of the covenant
experience of Israel and would, therefore, parallel that
of the Gentile nations.
The
punch line of the story, if you will, is that in spite
of the servant status the prodigal has earned for himself
outside of the covenant family, the father welcomes him
back to covenant family life. The parable suggests that
whether one is a member of the covenant family of Israel
who has fallen out of the covenant, or one who is beyond
the reach of the covenant promises made to Israel (as
is the case with the Gentiles), "there is the same
kind of joy before the angels of God over one repentant
sinner."
Reflection
Questions:
Upon
putting yourself in the various roles in the story of
the prodigal son, what elements of the text seem most
significant to you?
Do
you think of your participation in Catholic life as covenant
family life or more in terms of institutional or political
life?
What
do you need to take to the loving embrace of the Father
in the Sacrament of Reconciliation?