ICCH Bulletin of September 1, 2024
September 1, 2024 Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time
Welcome Father Bernward Today’s Readings: Dt 4:1-2, 6-8 | Jas 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27 | Mk 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23
So the Pharisees and scribes questioned [Jesus…] He responded, “Well did Isaiah prophesy about you hypocrites, as it is written: This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me; in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines human precepts. You disregard God’s commandment but cling to human tradition.” (Mark 7:5-8)
Washing Your Hands Before Dinner
In the Gospel Reading, Jesus and the Pharisees have a public fight about the Jewish tradition of washing your hands before dinner. Jesus puts the Pharisees and their tradition down with a scathing denunciation. He calls the Pharisees “hypocrites,” who have God on their lips but not in their hearts.
So, what does this story say about tradition?
Well, we might think, if cleaving to tradition gets the Pharisees the denunciation of the Lord, then so much the worse for tradition!
And yet where would we be without tradition? Our whole religious understanding and practice, even our creeds, are shaped by tradition.
The solution to the perplexity lies in the story. When the Pharisees ask Jesus why his disciples don’t keep the tradition of hand-washing, their question isn’t a request for information. It is a challenge to his whole ministry. From the point of view of the Pharisees, a person couldn’t be from God and not wash his hands before dinner in accordance with the tradition.
A tradition hands on something precious from one generation to another. But the tradition the Pharisees cling to does not in fact convey the God of Moses, does it? What kind of God would make his total acceptance or rejection of a person dependent on whether or not he washed his hands before dinner? Where is the righteous, merciful, loving God of Moses in this view of the Pharisees?
In the First Reading, Moses orders the people to communicate God’s commands without adding or subtracting anything from them. The Nicene creed, which is part of the tradition that structures our faith, does not violate this order of Moses, because the Nicene creed does not change biblical teachings. It only unfolds them and gives deeper insight into them.
But when the Pharisees privilege hand-washing above the true goodness of Christ, they don’t transmit what Moses gave them. They wreck it, in the name of tradition. And that is why Jesus says the tradition of the Pharisees is the tradition of men. These defenders of religious tradition have lost their grip on the very thing they were supposed to pass on, God’s goodness and love. That is why Jesus calls them ‘hypocrites.’
It is a cautionary tale for all of us, isn’t it?
Source of reflection: © 2024, Eleonore Stump, https://liturgy.slu.edu/22OrdB090124/reflections_stump.html Source of image: Tissot, James, 1836-1902, “Scribe Stood to Test Jesus”, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=57994 [retrieved August 31, 2024].
News
- 8 September - Kindly take note that our monthly social gathering, while usually on the first Sunday of the month, will not take place on Sept 1, but instead on the last day of the school holidays, September 8 (which also happens to be our ICCH anniversary day). We hope most our members are back by then and will contribute to making this a wonderful get-together!