If you wish to read the texts click here:1 Corinthians 3:1-9; Lk 4:38-44
The reading of today allows us
to encounter a Jesus who was busy day and night “doing” and yet a Jesus who
would manage to find the time “to be”.
The first of the three scenes
that form part of this section deals with the healing of Peter’s mother-in-law.
Since in Luke this healing takes place before the call of the first disciples,
he does not mention Andrew, James and John as Mark does (Mk 1,29). He also
probably uses this healing to prepare for the call of Peter, which he narrates
in 5,1-11.
In the second scene, Luke
depicts a Jesus who would heal people at all times of the day or night. While
the demons use the title “Son of God” to identify Jesus, Luke himself informs
the readers that Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ. Luke seems to have taken the
silencing function from Mark because it is not clear in his Gospel as it is in Mark,
why Jesus would not allow the demons to speak.
In the third and final scene of
this section, Luke portrays a Jesus who would find time to commune with his
Father. He portrays a man of action and yet a man of prayer, though he does not
explicitly state here that Jesus prayed. Though the crowds want to prevent
Jesus from leaving, Jesus is clear that he must go on to other places as well,
for the kingdom belongs to all.
This Jesus is the one who
challenges us today to be men and women who derive our strength “to do” from
“the one who is and will always be”.
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