Gospel Now

CFA is launching a new magazine in the coming school year, titled “Gospel Now”. The magazine will present matters of faith and values to students on a whole new level, showing Christian Living as the way of life. Read more...

 
 

Film and Faith 3

  • Jan 17-19, 2009 - Seminar with Fr. Peter Malone, MSC
  • Jan 19-24, 2009 - Film Festival (featuring Signis Award-winning films)
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    Let The Dead Bury The Dead
    Today’s Gospel:  Luke 9:57-62

    REFLECTION
    The words in today’s Gospel (of having “the dead bury the dead”) belong to the second in the group of three incidents in which Jesus impresses on potential followers the absolute priority of the claims of the kingdom of God over everything else. Here he calls on a man to come along with him as his disciple. The man is not unwilling, but says, “Lord, first let me go and bury my father.” A reasonable request, one might have thought. Burial took place very soon after death, so, if his father had just died, he would probably be buried the same day. The man would then be free to follow Jesus. If he was the eldest son, it was his responsibility to see to his father’s burial. It may be, however, that he meant, “Let me stay at home until my father dies; when I have buried him, I shall be free of family obligations, and then I will come and follow you.” This is not the most natural way to take his words, although it makes Jesus’ response less peremptory. But an interpretation that makes Jesus’ demands less peremptory than they seem to be at first blush is probably to be rejected for that very reason. His demands WERE peremptory.

    Who then are “the dead” who are to be left to bury the dead? One suggestion is that Jesus’ Aramaic words have been mistranslated into Greek - that he actually meant “Leave the dead to the burier of the dead.” That is to say, there are people whose professional work it is to bury the dead; they can be left to look after this business, but there is more important work for you to do. But this again detracts from the rigorous peremptoriness of Jesus’ words. They are best taken to mean “Leave the (spiritually) dead to bury the (physically) dead” - there are people who are quite insensitive to the claims of the kingdom of God, and they can deal with routine matters like the burial of the dead, but those who are alive to its claims must give them the first place. There are Bible scholars who think that Jesus’ reply was a vivid way of saying, “That business must look after itself; you have more important work to do.”

    The burial even of dead strangers was regarded as a highly meritorious work of piety in Judaism; how much more the burial of one’s own kin! Attendance to the duty of burying one’s parents was held to be implied in the fifth commandment: “Honor your father and mother.” It took precedence over the most solemn religious obligations. But so important in Jesus’ eyes was the business of following him and promoting the kingdom of God that it took precedence even over the burial of the dead.

    The added words in Luke 9:60, “but you go and proclaim the kingdom of God,” are absent from the parallel in Matthew 8:22. The proclamation that the kingdom of God had drawn near was part of the charge which Jesus laid on his disciples (Lk 9:2; 10:9). The direct sense of his injunction to this man is related to the circumstances of his Galilean ministry, but it retained its relevance after his death and resurrection, and a situation may arise in which it proves still to be strikingly relevant.

    Today’s Reading:  Job 9:1-12, 14-16

    PRAYER
    Lord, whatever business we have, it cannot be more important than the business of doing Your work. Help us to focus on You and You alone.  In Jesus’ Name we pray.  Amen.