Today,
we gather as a community of faith on Labor Day. On this
holiday, our society honors and recognizes all the contributions that workers
make to our society. As a
community of faith, I think it's appropriate to recognize all that workers
contribute to building the kingdom of God here on earth as well.
At
issue in today's Gospel reading is whether it's lawful for Jesus to cure a man
of a withered hand on the Sabbath. As we
reflect on all that has cluttered up the
Sabbath and has filled our daily lives in our modern word, perhaps it is
appropriate to recognize the need our community has to recover the meaning of
Sabbath. What
does the Sabbath really mean for us and what did it mean in the context of the
Ten Commandments that were received by the people of Israel? Regarding the observance of the Sabbath, Benedictine
Sister Joan Chittister in her book on the Ten Commandments asserts that the
rabbis of ancient Israel taught that the Sabbath has a threefold purpose. First,
it is to free the poor, as well as the rich, for at least one day a week, which
also included animals. Nobody had to take an order from anyone on the Sabbath.
E.
Second, the Sabbath is to give people time to evaluate their work just as God
himself evaluated the work of creation.
The people of Israel were to reflect upon the manner that their work was
really life-giving. Finally,
Sabbath leisure gives people space to contemplate the real meaning of life.
Sister Joan asserts strongly: “If anything has brought the modern world to the
brink of destruction, it must surely be the loss of Sabbath.”
Just
as the scribes and Pharisees questioned the true meaning of the Sabbath, our
challenge as a community is to hold the time and place of Sabbath sacred,
despite all the forces that seek to envelope it. We
still need to take up our time together to celebrate what we have received from
God. As
our Gospel illustrates today, the Sabbath, after all, is not ultimately about
law, but it's about compassion. It is
about the compassion for the needs of our bodies and minds to rest. It is
about compassion for the needs of our loved ones and our neighbors. It is
about compassion for all of God's creation: also for the sea, the land, and the
air, that they may also rest and refresh. The
Sabbath is about radical identification with and for the God of compassion, who
revels in all that has been made & calls it good. As we
take a break from our work this Labor day, may we truly reflect what the
Sabbath means to us in our daily lives, and what we can do to better honor our
relationship with God thru our observance of the Sabbath.
No comments:
Post a Comment