Mt 10: 37-42
Opening Prayer
Lord
Jesus, send your Spirit to help us to read the Scriptures with the same mind
that you read them to the disciples on the way to Emmaus. In the light of the Word,
written in the Bible, you helped them to discover the presence of God in the
disturbing events of your
sentence and death. Thus, the cross that seemed to be the end of
all hope became for them the source of life and of resurrection.
Create
in us silence so that we may listen to your voice in Creation and in the
Scriptures, in events and in people, above all in the poor and suffering. May your word guide us so that
we too, like the two disciples from Emmaus, may experience the force of your resurrection and
witness to others that you are alive in our midst as source of fraternity,
justice, and peace. We ask this of you, Jesus, son of Mary, who revealed to us
the Father and sent us your Spirit. Amen.
Reading
A Division of the Text to Help with the
Reading:
• Matthew 10: 37: Love of Jesus
must be above love
of father and mother and children
• Matthew 10: 38: The cross is
part of the following of Jesus
• Matthew 10: 39: To
know how to lose one’s life so as to keep it
• Matthew 10: 40-41: Jesus
identifies himself with the missionary and the disciple
• Matthew 10: 42: The least deed
done to one of the least is rewarded
A Key to the Reading:
In the
13th Sunday of ordinary time, we meditate on the last section of the Discourse
on Mission (Mt 10: 1- 42). This discourse contains words and counsels of Jesus,
teaching us to carry out the mission of proclaiming the Good News of God. Jesus
does not deceive, and points out clearly the difficulties that this mission
implies. As we read this text, it is good to pay
attention to what follows: “What is Jesus’ basic demand of those who go on
mission?”
Text:
37 'No
one who prefers father or mother to me is worthy of me. No one who prefers son
or daughter to me is worthy of me. 38 Anyone who does not take his cross and
follow in my footsteps is not
worthy of me. 39 Anyone who finds his life will lose it; anyone who loses his life for
my sake will find it.
40
'Anyone who welcomes you welcomes me; and anyone who welcomes me welcomes the
one who sent me. 41 'Anyone who welcomes a prophet because he is a prophet will have a prophet's
reward; and anyone who welcomes an upright person because he is upright will
have the reward of an upright person. 42 'If anyone gives so much as a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he
is a disciple, then in truth I tell you, he will most certainly not go without his reward.'
A Moment of Prayerful Silence
so that the Word of God may
penetrate and enlighten our life.
Some Questions
to help us in our personal
reflection.
• What part of the text touched
you most? Why?
• What recommendations does this
text hold for us? What is its basic demand?
• Jesus says: "No one who prefers father or mother to me is
worthy of me” – How
must we understand this statement?
• What does the text tell us
about the mission we must undertake as disciples of Jesus?
To Go Deeper Into the Topic
The Context of our Text in the
Gospel of Matthew:
The
Gospel of Matthew organizes the words and actions of Jesus around five great
discourses:
• Matthew 5 to 7: The Discourse of the Mountain describes the gateway to
the
Kingdom.
• Matthew
10: the Discourse on the
Mission describes the way those who follow Jesus must proclaim
the Good News
of the Kingdom and the
difficulties involved.
• Matthew
13: the Discourse of the Parables, by means of parallels taken from daily
life, Jesus reveals the presence of
the Kingdom in people’s lives.
• Matthew
18: the Discourse on Community describes
how Christians ought to live together in such a way that the community becomes a revelation
of the Kingdom.
• Matthew
24 and 25: the
Eschatological Discourse describes the future coming of the Kingdom of God.
Through this literary device, Matthew imitates the five books of the
Pentateuch, and thus presents the Good News of the Kingdom as the New Law of
God.
In the
Discourse on the Mission (Mt 10: 1-42), the Evangelist puts together words and
recommendations of Jesus that shed light on the difficult situation of the
Judeo- Christians towards the second half of the first century. He wants to
encourage them not to lose heart despite the many and grave difficulties they have to face in
proclaiming the Good News to the brothers and sisters of their race. It is
indeed at this time, the 80’s, that
the Jews are recovering from the disaster of the destruction of Jerusalem which
took place in the 70’s, and are
beginning to reorganize themselves in the regions of Syria and Galilee. A
tension is growing between the “Synagogue” and the
“Ecclesia”. This tension, source of much suffering and persecution,
forms the background to the Discourse on the Mission and, thus, to the Gospel
of the 13th Sunday of ordinary time.
A Commentary on the Text:
• Matthew 10: 37: Love of Jesus must be greater than love of
parents and children Jesus says: “No one who prefers
father or mother to me is worthy of me; no one who prefers son or daughter to
me is worthy of me”. We find this same statement in the Gospel of Luke with
even greater force: “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother,
and wife and children, and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he
cannot be my disciple” (Lk 14: 26). Does Jesus then
want to disintegrate family life? This cannot be so, because elsewhere he
insists on the observance of the fourth commandment which binds us to love
father and mother (Mk 7: 8-13; 10: 17-19). He himself obeyed his parents (Lk 2:
51). These seem to be contradictory statements. One thing is certain: Jesus
does not contradict himself. We shall give an interpretation to show that the
two statements are both true and not mutually exclusive.
• Matthew 10: 38: The cross is
part of following Jesus
Jesus says: “Anyone who does not take his cross and follow in my
footsteps is not worthy of me”. In Mark’s Gospel
Jesus says: “If anyone wishes to come after me. let him
deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me!” (Mk 8: 34). In
those days, the cross was the death sentence imposed by the Roman Empire for
thieves and the marginalized. To take up one’s
cross and
follow Jesus was equivalent to accepting being marginalized by the unjust
system of the Empire. Jesus’ cross
is the consequence of the free commitment taken on to reveal the Good News that
God is Father and that, therefore, all are to be accepted and treated as
brothers and sisters. Because of this revolutionary proclamation, Jesus was
persecuted and was not afraid to give up his life. Greater love than this no
man has, that he lay down his life for his friends.
• Matthew 10: 39: To know how to
lose one’s life so
as to keep it
This
manner of speaking was quite common among the early Christians because it
expressed what they were
living through. For instance, for Paul to be faithful to Jesus
and obtain life, he had to lose everything he had, career, the respect of his
people, and suffer persecution. The same happened to many Christians.
Christians were
persecuted for being Christian. Paul says: “I am crucified with Christ”. “I wish to experience
his cross and his death, so that I may also experience his resurrection.”
“I am crucified to the world and
the world to me”.
This is
the paradox of the Gospel: The last is first, the one who loses wins, the one
who gives all keeps
all, the one who dies lives. The one who has the courage to lose
life obtains it. This is a logic that is quite different from the neo-liberal
system that rules the world today.
• Matthew 10: 40-41: Jesus
identifies himself with the missionary and the disciple For
the missionary and the disciple, it is very important to know that he/she will
never be alone. If she/he remains faithful to her/his mission, she/he will have
the certainty that Jesus identifies himself with her/him, and through Jesus the
Father will reveal
himself to those to whom the missionary and disciple proclaim the Good News.
And so, just as Jesus reflected the face of the Father, so also the disciple
must or should be a mirror where people can glimpse something of the love of
Jesus.
• Matthew 10: 42: The least deed done for
the little ones, reveals the
presence of the Father
In
order to change the world and human relationships, the political decisions of
powerful persons are not enough, nor are the decrees of Councils and of
bishops. What is needed is a change in the lives of people, in interpersonal
and community relationships otherwise nothing will change. That is why Jesus puts so
much importance on small acts of sharing: a glass of water given to a poor person!
A Deepening: To Love Father and
Mother, to Hate Father and Mother!
One of the things that Jesus insists on for those who
wish to follow him is that of leaving
behind father, mother, wife, children, sisters, house, land, to leave
everything for love of Him and his Gospel (Lk 18: 29; Mt 19: 29; Mk 10: 29). He
even commands us “to hate
father, mother, wife, children, sisters, brothers. Otherwise, you cannot be my disciples”
(cf Lk 14: 28). These demands are not just for some but for
all those who wish to follow him (Lk 14: 25-26, 33). How can we understand these statements
that seem to dismantle and break up all family ties? We cannot imagine Jesus
demanding of all men
and
women in Galilee to leave their families, lands, villages to follow him. In
fact, this did not happen except for a small group of followers. So what is the meaning of these demands?
If we place the demand to leave one’s family within the social
context of the period, we can see another meaning, much more fundamental and practical. The
invasion of Palestine in 64 B.C. and the imposition of the tribute by Herod (35
to 3 B.C.) and his son Herod Antipas (3 B.C. to 37 A.D.), a policy in favor of the Roman government, brought progressive
impoverishment and growing unemployment.
Through Herod’s policy, supported by the Roman Empire, the Hellenic ideology
permeated daily life, thus bringing with it growing individualism. All this
caused the larger family, the clan and the community to disintegrate. Thus the
small family began to feel bound to turn in on itself and not able to practice the law.
Besides, the practice of ritual purity caused people to despise and exclude
those persons and families that lived in legal impurity. The economic, social,
political and religious context made it possible for families to turn in on
themselves and weaken the clan. Preoccupation with family problems stopped
people from uniting in community. It stopped the clan from realizing the aim
for which it was created, that is, to offer real and adequate protection for
families and persons, to preserve identity, to defend land, to prevent
exclusion and to welcome the excluded and the poor, and thus to reveal the face
of God. Now, for the Kingdom to reveal itself again in the sharing, it was
necessary to break the vicious circle. People had to overcome the strict limits
of the small family to open themselves to the larger family and the Community.
This is the context that forms the background to the words proclaimed by Jesus.
Jesus
himself gives an example. When his family tries to claim him, he reacts and says, “Who are my mother and my brethren?” And looking around he says:
“Behold my mother and my brethren! For whoever does the will God, he is my brother and sister and mother” (Mk 3: 33-35). He stretched the family. He
created community. The people he attracted and called were the poor and the excluded (Lk 4: 18; Mt 11: 25). He
asked the same thing of those who wished to follow him. The excluded and
marginalized must be welcomed again into the sharing and thus feel welcomed by
God (cf Lk 14: 12-14). This was the way to achieve the end of the Law that said: “There should be no one
of you in need” (Dt 15: 4).
Jesus
tries to change the process of disintegration of the clan, of the community.
Like the great prophets of the past, he seeks to consolidate community life in
the villages of Galilee. He takes up again the deep meaning of the clan, of the
family, of the community as an expression of the incarnation of the love of God
in the love of neighbor. That is why he asks of those
who wish to be
his disciples to leave father, mother, wife, brother, sister, house, all! They
have to lose their life in order to possess it! He is the guarantor of this: “Amen I say to you, there is no one who has left house or brothers
or sisters or mother or father or children or lands for my sake and for the Gospel’s sake, who shall not receive now in the present time a
hundredfold as much, houses and brothers and sisters and mothers and children
and lands – along
with persecutions, and in the age to come life everlasting”
(MK 10:
29-30). Truly, those who have the courage to break the closed circle of their
family, will find
again, in the clan, in the community, a
hundredfold whatever they have left: brother, sister, mother, child, land!
Jesus does that which people expected in messianic times: to lead back the
hearts of parents to their children, and the hearts of children to their
parents, to rebuild the clan, reweave the social pattern.
Psalm 19: 7-14
The Law of Yahweh is Perfect
The Law of Yahweh is perfect,
refreshment to the soul;
the
decree of Yahweh is trustworthy, wisdom for the simple. The precepts of Yahweh
are honest, joy for the heart;
the
commandment of Yahweh is pure, light for the eyes. The fear of Yahweh is pure,
lasting forever;
the
judgements of Yahweh are true, upright, every one, more desirable than gold,
even than the finest gold;
his words are sweeter than
honey, that drips from the comb.
Thus your
servant is formed by them; observing them brings great reward. But who can
detect his own failings? Wash
away my hidden faults.
And
from pride preserve your servant, never let it be my master. So shall I be
above reproach, free from grave sin.
May the
words of my mouth always
find favor, and the whispering of my
heart, in your presence, Yahweh, my rock, my redeemer.
Final Prayer
Lord
Jesus, we thank for the word that has enabled us to understand better the will
of the Father. May your Spirit enlighten our actions and grant us the strength
to practice that which your Word has revealed to us. May we, like Mary, your
mother, not only listen to
but also practice the Word. You
who live and reign with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit forever and
ever. Amen.