Christ the King – Following His Way

Cristo Rey (Christ the King), 1953, Cali, Colombia
(About this Image)

So Pilate said to him, “Then you are a king?”
Jesus answered, “You say I am a king.
For this I was born and for this I came into the world,
to testify to the truth.
Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.”
(John 18:37)

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the First Reading
Solemnity of Christ the King
Daniel 7:13–14
November 21, 2021

Like last week, we will be using a commentary written several years ago. The historical background still represents contemporary scholarship and has remained unchanged, but I have developed the conclusions somewhat differently.

When I was a young priest, there were still older ones who spoke about “Representative Men”. It was an Edwardian expression for a someone with superior skills who we would want to represent us. This is where we begin with the title: “Son of Man”. Although it is somewhat vague on purpose and will be developed by Jesus in a rather surprising way, we must remember that it has a specific place in the Book of Daniel.

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33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time – Putting God First

Majestas, detail from the High Altar at St. Cyprian’s (London),
Ninian Comper, c. 1903, from Art in the Christian Tradition.
Original source: Flickr

“And then they will see
‘the Son of Man coming in the clouds’
with great power and glory,
Mark 13:26

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the First Reading
Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time
Book of Daniel 12:1-3
November 14, 2021

This commentary was written 3 years ago, the last time this reading was used at Sunday Mass. If you are reading it for the first time, it will give a rather wide historical view of growth of the Jews’ self-understanding. If reading it again, it may provide a chance to test how your own understanding of the importance of the Old Testament has helped you to better know and love the New.

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32nd Sunday in Ordinary of Time – Putting Our Hope in the Christ’s Sacrifice

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the Second Reading
Thirty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time
Observance of the Memorial of St. Charles Borromeo
Hebrews 9:24–2
November 7, 2021

Today, we complete our study of the Letter to the Hebrews. This section is not the end of the entire letter, but it brings together many of the ideas we have discussed. We have seen that the Author is well versed in Judaism but also more than merely competent in using the Greek language. He knows that his audience was composed mostly of people born Jews and that they judged the world as Jews. They saw themselves as members of a people who had a unique relationship with God indeed, they shared a covenant with Him and each other. They would change their religious practices and commitments only if they believed that this change would bring them into a deeper relationship with the God, they called the Lord.
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31st Sunday in Ordinary Time – Sharing in the One Priesthood of Jesus

Caritas, William Wilson, 1954,
St. Mungo’s Cathedral (Glasgow). Source: Flickr 

The scribe said to him, “Well said, teacher.
You are right in saying,
‘He is One and there is no other than he.’
And ‘to love him with all your heart,
with all your understanding,
with all your strength,
and to love your neighbor as yourself’
is worth more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.”
(Mark 12:3234)

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the Second Reading
Thirty-First Sunday of Ordinary Time
Hebrews: 7:23-28
October 31, 2021

Last week, we were introduced to the priest / king Melchizedek. He was a mysterious figure who the author of Hebrews used to demonstrate the validity and superiority of Jesus’s priesthood. He returns to this in today’s passage, but we must back up a bit to the beginning of chapter 7 to understand the issues involved.

Chapter 7 will compare the priesthood of Melchizedek with that of the official “Levitical” priesthood and then show the importance of Jesus’ descent from the former. The author is demonstrating considerable intellectual dexterity and originality in this interpretation but one, as we will discover, very important for our own understanding of the Priesthood.
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30th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Love Greater Than We Can Imagine

Jesus Cures the Man Born Blind, Jesus Mafa, 1973
from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN.
Original source: http://www.librairie-emmanuel.fr.
(About this Image)

Jesus said to him in reply,
“What do you want me to do for you?”
The blind man replied to him, “Master, I want to see.”
(Mark 10:51)

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the Second Reading
Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Hebrews: 5:1-6
October 24, 2021

In last week’s commentary, we began the section of the Letter to the Hebrews that proclaimed Jesus as the High Priest. We will continue this theme for the next 3 weeks. It may seem to us that the author develops this at excessive length. It is an interesting interpretation—we will readily admit—but perhaps could be more economically stated. First, we should note that the sections we will read these next few weeks are at best the highlights of the Author’s exposition. Also, this reflects more than an attractive theological concept, it is a matter of life and death for his community. Scripture never loses its force so it would do us well to understand the relevance of Jesus’ priesthood for ourselves.
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29th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Our Way to the Father’s Presence

Trinity Church, Boston – Interior, from Art in the Christian
Tradition
, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN.

Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you will be your servant;
whoever wishes to be first among you will be the slave of all.
For the Son of Man did not come to be served
but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many.
(Mark 10:43–45)

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the Second Reading
Twenty-Ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 4:14-16
October 17, 2021

Today we begin a new section of the Letter to the Hebrews and examine in, what to us may seem excessive detail, Jesus as High Priest. In two verses, the author provides an overture for the several chapters that follow and introduces themes he will take up and develop later. To understand any of them we must step back and look at covenant and the priesthood that it requires.

The Israelites identified as a people who had a unique relationship with the God they referred to as “the Lord.” They did not have a contract with him for goods and services but a covenant sharing his very life. In their world, a covenant made a common family. Jews intrigued by Christianity would never jeopardize this relationship and would only convert if they thought this was a way of being even closer to the Lord. The author of Hebrews is concerned that some of the members of his community, most likely a “Jewish Christian” church in Rome, have had second thoughts and were considering a return to Judaism. He is therefore talking to them as a Jew to other Jews and we must master some basic ideas to follow him. Continue reading “29th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Our Way to the Father’s Presence”

28th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Love Beyond Our Ability to Understand

For he had great possessions’, (detail)
George Frederic Watts, 1894, Tate Gallery
(About this Image)

Jesus, looking at him, loved him
and said to him,
“You are lacking in one thing.
Go, sell what you have,
and give to the poor
and you will have treasure in heaven;
then come, follow me.”
At that statement his face fell,
and he went away sad,
for he had many possessions.
(Luke 10:21–22)

Fr. Smith’s Commentary on the Second Reading
Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 4:12-13
October 10, 2021

Last week we began our examination of the Letter to the Hebrews. The quality of its language reveals a highly educated person, his familiarity with Jewish scripture and folklore, a born Jew. The urgency of his address shows a concern that his readers are under some form of persecution and that many of them may return to Judaism. Today, he will remind them whose opinion ultimately matters.

He writes in very cultured Greek, but he employs very Jewish techniques. Last week’s section was an interpretation of Psalm 8. This week he again returns to the Psalms with the conclusion of a long and quite profound discussion of Psalm 95 most especially:

Do not harden your hearts, as at Meribah,
as on the day at Massah in the wilderness,
when your ancestors tested me,
and put me to the proof, though they had seen my work.
For forty years I loathed that generation
and said, “They are a people whose hearts go astray,
and they do not regard my ways.”
Therefore in my anger I swore,
“They shall not enter my rest.”
(Ps 95:8–11)

This Psalm refers to the time when although the LORD had freed them from slavery in Egypt, they rejected his rule almost immediately after their liberation. As they had just been the beneficiary of a great miracle, they showed themselves “hard of heart” that is unable to hear the word of God. The forty years refer to the time the Jewish people wandered in the desert. They do not receive their rest—entrance into the promised land—until all but two have died and the new generation has learned to hear the word.

The author of Hebrews takes another step. Rest is more than a geographical place or political reality but living in right relation with God.

At the beginning of his letter, he writes:

Long ago God spoke to our ancestors
in many and various ways by the prophets,
but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son,
whom he appointed heir of all things,
through whom he also created the worlds.
He is the reflection of God’s glory
and the exact imprint of God’s very being,
and he sustains all things by his powerful word.
When he had made purification for sins,
he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high,
having become as much superior to angels
as the name he has inherited is more excellent than theirs.
(Heb 1:1–4)

This connection was once best obtained through Judaism—note reference to angels—but now it is through Jesus. He is more than the means of speaking the Word he is the word who indeed created the world.

The line immediately before today’s passage reads:

Therefore, let us strive to enter into that rest,
so that no one may fall after the same example of disobedience.
(Heb 4:11)

We begin today with “indeed”—therefore living a life of obedience which will bring us to God’s rest is possible through the Word of God who is Jesus.

For this author this is the fulfillment of the Jewish Scriptures:

Indeed, the word of God is living and effective,
sharper than any two-edged sword,
penetrating even between soul and spirit,
joints and marrow,
and able to discern reflections and thoughts of the heart.
(Heb 4:12)

It is living, here meaning at very least contemporary. Many times, the author will remind he people that they can hear the voice of God and choose him. For example:

Today, if you hear his voice,
do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion,
as on the day of testing in the wilderness
(Heb 3:7–8)

Again, from the Scriptures they knew what effective meant:

For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven,
and do not return there until they have watered the earth,
making it bring forth and sprout,
giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
11 so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth;
it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
and succeed in the thing for which I sent it.
(Is 55:10–11)

Because a sword could eviscerate
it was a good symbol for getting at truth.
He made my mouth like a sharp sword,
in the shadow of his hand he hid me;
he made me a polished arrow,
in his quiver he hid me away.
(Is 49:2)

and

Let the high praises of God be in their throats
and two-edged swords in their hands
(Ps 149:6)

Remember in Luke, Simeon says to Mary: “and you yourself a sword will pierce, so that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed.”

In the author’s anthropology, “soul” means that which is human and “Spirit” that which is connected to God. Joints and marrow are the deepest part of the body. Jesus, the word of God, goes to the very core of our being and reveals all.

The human heart can be a dark place, but we cannot hide from God and thus we cannot hide from Jesus:

The heart is devious above all else;
it is perverse—
who can understand it?
I the LORD test the mind
and search the heart,
to give to all according to their ways,
according to the fruit of their doings
(Je 17:9–10)

and

O LORD, you have searched me and known me.
You know when I sit down and when I rise up;
you discern my thoughts from far away.
(Ps 139:1–2)

No creature is concealed from him,
but everything is naked and exposed
to the eyes of him
to whom we must render an account.
(Heb 4:13)

The Old Testament has many times when humans tried to escape from God, most famously:

They heard the sound of the LORD God
walking in the garden
at the time of the evening breeze,
and the man and his wife hid themselves
from the presence of the LORD God
among the trees of the garden.
(Ge 3:8)

Yet it is impossible. A line from 1st Enoch, a book that did not make it into the canon but would have been known to the author’s audience is on target:

Everything is naked and open before your sight,
and you see everything;
and there is nothing which can hide itself from you
(1 Enoch 1:5)

We need to remember that many of his readers might have been considering returning to Judaism. The author is telling them that it is Jesus to whom they will render an account and that he knows everything about them.

We might find this a terrifying thought, yet I find it comforting. He purified us of our sins by his death on the cross and this is love beyond our ability to understand. Here is the wonder: Jesus knows us completely and loves us totally.