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Exegesis
November
8, 2009
Thirty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)
Dr. Terrance Callan
1 Kings 17:10-16
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Hebrews 9:24-28
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Mark 12:38-44
We are inspired
by stories of heroism, such as that of St. Maximilian Kolbe who volunteered
to die in the place of another concentration camp inmate who had been
condemned to death. We are inspired though we may doubt that we could
display such heroic virtue. But we too are called to give all that we have
to God, not holding back even what we need to keep ourselves alive, and
relying on God to sustain us.
In the reading from the gospel according to Mark, Jesus points
out to his disciples a widow who is making a contribution to the temple
treasury. Her contribution, worth only a penny, is much smaller than the
contributions others are making. But Jesus says that she has given more
than anyone else because she has given all she has. Implicitly, Jesus asks
us to be like the widow, giving to God all that we have to live on.
The reading from the first book of Kings tells a story about
another widow who gave all she had. In the midst of a severe drought, the
prophet Elijah came to Zarephath and asked a widow to give him some bread.
She told him that she had only enough flour and oil to make a last meal for
herself and her son, after which they would die. Nevertheless Elijah asked
her to share with him what she had left, promising that God would supply her
with food until the drought was over. And so it was. This story says
explicitly that the widow gave away what she had in reliance on the
providence of God, something that may be presumed in the case of the other
widow. The story also shows us that giving everything to God includes
sharing what we have with those in need.
Confronted by this call to give ourselves completely to God, we
instinctively hold back; we doubt that we are capable of such heroism,
perhaps because we doubt that God really will take care of us if we attempt
it. But the reading from the letter to the Hebrews comes to our aid,
assuring us that we can rely on God.
The passage is part of an elaborate comparison of the death and
resurrection of Jesus to the observance of the Day of Atonement in the
Jerusalem temple. Each year on the Day of Atonement the high priest would
bring the blood of sacrifices into the sanctuary of the temple in order to
take away the sins of the people. But the death and resurrection of Jesus
far surpasses this. In his death and resurrection Jesus brought his own
blood into the heavenly sanctuary to take away sins once for all. And, the
passage adds, he will come again to complete the salvation that he has
begun.
This excerpt from the letter to the Hebrews reminds us that
Jesus has already given himself up completely for us, and that he has
already obtained for us what we most need - peace with God and hope of
eternal life. When we reflect on this, we may find it possible to give
everything to God, trusting that he will take care of us. God will finish
what he has started in us.
Terrance Callan
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