Matthew
12:1-8
One
Sabbath, Jesus was strolling with his disciples through a field of ripe grain.
Hungry, the disciples were pulling off the heads of grain and munching on them.
2 Some Pharisees reported them to Jesus: "Your disciples are breaking the
Sabbath rules!" 3 Jesus said, "Really? Didn't you ever read what
David and his companions did when they were hungry, 4 how they entered the
sanctuary and ate fresh bread off the altar, bread that no one but priests were
allowed to eat? 5 And didn't you ever read in God's Law that priests carrying
out their Temple duties break Sabbath rules all the time and it's not held
against them? 6" There is far more at stake here than religion. 7 If you
had any idea what this Scripture meant-- 'I prefer a flexible heart to an
inflexible ritual'-- you wouldn't be nitpicking like this. 8 The Son of Man is
no lackey to the Sabbath; he's in charge."
Food
for soul!
In
Palestine in the time of Jesus the cornfields and the cultivated lands were
laid out in long narrow strips; and the ground between the strips was always a
right of passage. It was on one of these strips between the cornfields that the
disciples and Jesus were walking when this incident happened. The gospel says
that they were hungry. So stood before them two things, human need and human
law.
The
disciples were not stealing. The Law expressly laid it down that the hungry
traveler was entitled to do just what the disciples were doing, so long as he
only used his hands to pluck the ears of corn, and did not use a sickle:
"When you go into your neighbour´s standing grain, you may pluck the ears
with your hand, but you shall not put a sickle to your neighbour´s standing
grain" (Deut.23:25).
In
the eyes, not of God but of the Scribes and Pharisees, the disciples were
at fault. Many times we are like these Scribes and Pharisees: we blame
people for their actions due to our ignorance of the Bible. Did you notice that
Jesus, twice, said: Didn't you ever read the Bible? Our ignorance
of Scripture has made us commit blunder after blunder, mistake after mistake and wrong accusations of others. To meet the
criticism of the Scribes and Pharisees Jesus reminded them of what is written in the Bible.
(i)
He quoted the action of David (1Sam.21:1-6) on the occasion when David and his
young men were so hungry that they went into the tabernacle, and in their
hunger, took and ate those sacred loaves without committing sin.
(ii)
He quoted the Sabbath work of the Temple. The Temple ritual always involved
work, and the priests worked on Sabbath without committing sin. Even today,
Sunday, which is supposed to be the day of rest for everybody, is not to the
priest. The busiest day of the week for the priest is Sunday!
(iii)
He quoted God's word to Hosea the prophet: "I desire steadfast love and
not sacrifice" (Hos.6:6). What God desires far more than ritual sacrifice
is kindness, the spirit which knows no law other than that it must answer the
call of human need.
In
this incident Jesus lays it down that the claim of human need must take
precedence of all other claims. The claims of worship, the claims of ritual,
the claims of liturgy are important but prior to any of them is the claim of
human need. Jesus insisted that the greatest ritual service is the service of
human need. If in your life, your business, your profession, you are not
serving some human need, I am afraid you are missing the point. The claims of
human need take precedence over any ritual, custom or law. All our laws in the
Church and society are just that, our laws! We are more important than any of
them. The son of man is lord over them all. God will reward us not for keeping
laws but for serving humans in their need.
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