Thursday, August 23, 2018

Sunday Gospel Reflection, August 26, 2018: We will serve the Lord...


 Whom will you serve?

   When Joshua formally gathers the elders, leaders, judges and officers of all the tribes of Israel, he asks them for a formal commitment to serve the Lord.  Citing God’s faithfulness to the people of Israel throughout their hardship in the desert, they all respond in unison, as if in a ritual ceremony, professing their formal commitment to do just that:  we serve the Lord.  They can promise, as the psalmist does in Psalm 34, to bless the Lord at all times, for he has protected them along their entire journey, and they have confidence that the Lord has eyes for the just.  It is a hard path, a path they may not fully understand, but here, at least, the people of Israel express their full commitment to God.

   Similarly, Jesus will ask for full commitment from his disciples in John’s Gospel, when, having shocked them with the notion that they must eat his flesh and drink his blood in order to have eternal life, Jesus sees many of his disciples return to their former way of life.  These refuse to commit to Jesus’ way; they have their own parameters of faith, of belief, and Jesus has challenged them in ways they cannot understand, and therefore do not believe.  The Twelve remain, however, having come to believe that Jesus has the words of eternal life, and is the Holy One of God.  Though they probably do not understand either, they believe, and express their belief in terms of full commitment to Jesus and all he asks of them.

   Paul will make the terms of this commitment clear in his Letter to the Ephesians.  Jesus, Paul says, asks for total commitment in the way of service to other.  Just as Jesus himself subordinated himself to humanity, handing himself over for the church in order to sanctify her, so we are called to model our lives on his, mutually subordinate to one another, committing ourselves to service of one another.  This is what love does.  Husbands who love and serve their wives are subordinate to them, just as wives who love and serve their husbands are subordinate to them.  It is this relationship of commitment, a conjugal relationship of Christ to the Church, to which we must commit ourselves; it is this invitation to mutually subordinate love that we must serve, that we might nourish and cherish one another in Christ.

This post is based on Fr. Pat’s Scripture class.
Image source:  www.wordle.net

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