Homily for the
16th Sunday
in Ordinary Time
July 22, 2012
Jer 23: 1-6
Mark 6: 30-34
Christian Brothers, Iona College,
N.R.
“I myself will gather the remnant of my flock from all the
lands to which I have driven them” (Jer 23: 3).
Jeremiah is the classic “bad news” prophet, the prophet of
doom and gloom. The shepherds of Israel—the kings of Judah
and the priests of Jerusalem—have
been leading the people astray. They’ve
tolerated, if not encouraged, idolatry.
They’ve made political choices at odds with God’s will. They’ve thrived on social injustice, ignoring
the needs of the poor. For instance, 100
years before Jeremiah the prophet Micah had denounced those who “covet fields
and seize them; houses, and they take them.
They cheat the owner of his house, a man of his inheritance” (2:2). Jeremiah faulted nobles, priests, and people
for adultery, slander, deceptive practices, and other crimes.
Consequently God has given Judah
over to her enemies, the king of Babylon
and his army, who have deposed one king and taken him, many of the nobles, army
officers, and craftsmen into exile, and they’ve put a new king—intended to be
their puppet—on the throne. But the new
king and the remaining leaders are no wiser than the old ones.
“You have scattered my sheep and driven them away,”
Jeremiah decries, speaking in God’s name.
“You have not cared for them, but I will take care to punish your evil
deeds” (23:2). Worse things are going to
come upon Jerusalem,
the priests, and the royal family at the hands of the Babylonians.
But Jeremiah also has good news, a promise of better
days. God will bring back together the
scattered flock, and he will find them a good shepherd, “a righteous shoot”
from David’s house, who “shall reign and govern wisely, shall do what is just
and right in the land” (23:5). “In his
days,” Jeremiah continues, “Judah
shall be saved, Israel
shall dwell in security. This is the
name they give him: ‘The Lord our
justice’” (23:6).
Whatever Jeremiah may have thought God had in mind about a
new and righteous king from the descendants of King David, and a restoration of
the kingdom to peace, prosperity, and justice on all levels, we don’t find that
fulfilled in the history of Israel between Jeremiah’s days, 600 years B.C., and
the destruction of Jerusalem and the province of Judea by the Romans in A.D.
70; nor does it look like today’s state of Israel is fulfilling what Jeremiah
promised.
St. Mark, however, finds its fulfillment in that Son of
David whose “heart was moved with pity for the vast crowd, for they were like
sheep without a shepherd” (6:34). The
apostles have just been out on a preaching and healing mission, as we heard
last week (6:7-13); they’ve come back, excited and, presumably, exhausted—this is
where this evening’s gospel picks up.
Furthermore, Jesus and the 12 have heard the terrible news that Herod
the tetrarch has executed John the Baptist—the passage in ch. 6 preceding our
reading (6:17-29)—which we may be sure unnerves them, shocks them. It’s also Mark’s subtle contrast between the
shepherding style of Herod and that of Jesus; Herod proves to be no better than
the kings and leaders whom Jeremiah denounced, a “shepherd who misleads and
scatters the flock of my pasture” (23:1), who causes the flock to “fear and
tremble” (23:4), who disposes of those sent by God, like John the Baptist.
So it’s a good time for Jesus and the 12 to disappear for
a while, to “go away to a deserted place and rest” (Mark 6:31), to evaluate
what they’ve been doing, what Herod’s done, what the scribes and Pharisees are
saying; to ponder what God’s asking of them at this point; to do some pastoral
planning.
But life intervenes; reality shows up. The vast crowd of abandoned sheep shows up at
their “deserted place.” And Jesus, a
true shepherd, responds to their hunger by “teaching them many things”
(6:34). Unlike the evil shepherds of
Jeremiah’s age, he cares for the flock, gathers them together instead of
scattering them, leads them securely with his teaching, his gentle manner, and
(tho Mark doesn’t say it here) his binding up their wounds. As we’ll hear next week, he even feeds them
when they’re hungry for physical food as well as for sound teaching (John
6:1-15; cf. Mark 6:34-44).
From an altarpiece in a church in Copenhagen |
All of which is a sign, a prelude, to Jesus’ saving of Judah, his establishing Israel in
security, his role as the Lord’s justice.
The ultimate salvation, the ultimate security, that he offers to the
flock is a right relationship with God (righteousness, or justice in the
biblical meaning of the term). He heals
more than bodies. His teaching brings
God close to the flock and makes the flock want to stay with God. “He is our peace,” St. Paul will proclaim (Eph 2:14), who has
“reconciled us with God” (2:16) and given us access to the Father (2:18).
Each celebration of the Eucharist (or any of the other
sacraments) is an invitation from Jesus, our good shepherd, to “come away and
rest a while,” to be with him and receive access thru him to the Father; to be
restored to a good relationship with the Father thru the forgiveness of our
sins and a close union with the Son who cares so much for us poor,
directionless, and scattered sheep. So
at the beginning of Mass we acknowledge our sins and our humble need to be
restored; and we open ourselves to God’s work—liturgy is literally a “public work” in classical Greek, but here
it’s God’s work, the mysteries by which he acts to save us, give us peace, lead
us to an eternal dwelling in security.
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