Thursday, March 12, 2009

3rd Sunday of Lent (B)

3rd Sunday of Lent, Year B

First reading: Exodus 20:1-3, 7-8, 12-17
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 19
Second reading: 1 Corinthians 1:22-25
Gospel reading: John 2:13-25

"Stop turning My Father's house into a marketplace."

This gospel passage from the evangelist John is perhaps the only
account written in the life of Jesus where He had really
expressed His anger not only in words but also in action: "He
made a kind of whip of cords and drove them all out of the temple
area, sheep and oxen alike, and knocked over the money-changers'
tables, spilling their coins." And He shouted: "Get them out of
here! Stop turning My Father's house into a marketplace!"

Some bible commentators would say that one reason why Jesus got
angry was because many of the merchants who were selling the
animals to be offered for sacrifice were probably cheating their
customers - usually using dishonest scales and measures. The
same goes with the money-changers who were transacting with
foreigners who knew not much of the commercial value of the money
they were exchanging with.

But probably, the better commentary comes from bible scholars
who would explain the prophetic action of Jesus as an emphasis
that the Temple of God is a sacred place of prayer. As such,
noise and worldly activities would profane it and create a
sacrilegiously scandalous scene for people who would like to
visit the Temple to pray and praise Yahweh. And Jesus also took
the occasion to teach that His own Sacred Body is also the Temple
of God. But the Jews did not understand Him because what they
only knew was the physical Temple - the one that took forty-six
years to build.

In the crucifixion account, we will also see how the soldiers
who had crucified Jesus, turned the Temple of His Body into
a marketplace: "We should not tear it (the soldiers said, in
reference to the tunic of Jesus). Let us throw dice to see who
gets it." In the life and ministry of Jesus, what He taught was
for the people to have great respect for the things of God - most
especially the Temple and also the Temple of the Father in person
- His own Sacred Body that was to be sacrificed when His hour
would come to pass.

Many of us are so accustomed to noise that we make our life so
much like a marketplace. We forget the value of the sacredness
of silence and prayer. That is why we are so attracted to the
noise in the world and forget that all this noise is vanity
(as the book of Ecclesiastes teaches us) - leading us to chase
the wind rather than to seek what is eternal. During this
season of Lent, let us seek God's presence more as we choose to
take moments of prayer and silence in His church. And let us
also examine our consciences and see how much we have sought the
marketplace more than the Lord who is always there for us in His
Most Blessed Sacrament.

No comments:

A Book on Cistercian Spirituality and Trappists in the Philippines

Contemplative Experience This book by a Cistercian abbot and monk helps us to understand what the contemplative experience is through thre...