Today’s gospel (Luke 13:10-17) shows Jesus affirming a certain way of interpreting the moral law. He heals a woman on the Sabbath. To some, the fact that this action was a miracle appears to be irrelevant; for them, He was wrong to heal on the day of rest. Should we see this as a peculiar blindness in those committed to a strict legal framework? Not necessarily.
It would be a mistake to imagine that Jesus’ action is an
overturning of the law. The healing of the woman is not a lawless action. In
fact, in some ways it is as strictly legal as the interpretation of the
sabbatarians. After all, the law that Jesus observes as He cures the woman is
the law of mercy by which a lower law gives way to a higher law. Moreover,
Jesus himself points out that even his critics would have watered their
animals on the Sabbath day.
We might say, therefore, that the real problem in this
gospel is not the legalism of Jesus' critics but their hypocritical malice;
they condemn in Him an action that they would have permitted themselves. In
other words, theirs is a fake accusation, an insincere indictment.
Jesus’ command not to judge others seems to urge us to blame
all wrongdoing on ignorance or error in the mind. In an endeavour to be
charitable, we prefer to think that it is an exaggerated legalism that leads
Jesus’ critics down the wrong path. Yet, it seems rather that their criticism
arises from simple bad will. They were not being high minded. They were
actually being perverse.
We have to consider this carefully. Human malice and
hypocrisy are real factors in the shaping of our lives and the shaping of the
lives of others. They are real and present dangers for the human heart,
tethered to this earth by jealousy, pride, self-regard, anger, or the
unregulated neediness that turns neighbour into an idol and makes a fetish of
the fashionable.
What we need in this case is the healing touch of the
merciful Lord, coming to our aid even after many years of our slavery. Our
salvation lies neither in legalism, nor in some form of deluded largesse about
observing the law, but in embracing the eternal law of divine love which alone can cure us of our malice, heal us of our sins, cast the mighty from their thrones, and raise the lowly.
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