To read the texts click on the texts: Ezek 47:1-2; 8-9, 12; 1 Cor 3:9-11, 16-17; Jn 2:13-22
The Basilica of St John Lateran
is the cathedral of Rome, the cathedra
or Chair, at which the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, presides. In order to express
devotion and unity of all Catholics to the successor of Peter, the Church
commemorates the dedication of the Lateran Basilica. Since the Pope presides in
charity over the universal Church, the Lateran Basilica is affectionately
called the “mother and head of all the churches of Rome and the world”.
When the cathedral in Milan was
finished, in the vast throng of people assembled for the dedication, a little
girl cried out in childish glee, as she pointed to it: I helped build that.”
One of the guards challenged her. “What? Show me what you did.” The girl
replied, “I carried the lunch box for my father, while he worked there.” The
church is not primarily a building but the people of God. All of us help build
up the Church.
It is interesting and revealing
that the gospel reading chose for this feast would be Jesus cleansing the
Temple. Much like the Temple was a significant and symbolic building for the
Jewish people, the Lateran Basilica serves in this capacity for us.
The first Christians gathered
to pray in private homes. For the first 300 years after the Resurrection of
Christ, to be a Christian was a crime of treason against the Roman state.
Therefore, believers would meet secretly to hear the Gospel and break the
bread. Today’s feast commemorates the end of those many long years of terrible
persecutions and martyrdom and the dedication of the Christians’ first public
place of worship.
While this was a welcome change
for the first Christian community, soon it began to struggle with a dilemma.
The source of Jesus’ power is found in weakness and poverty. While being an
underground Church this was easy to accept. Now, being accepted by the state,
Christianity’s power began to be aligned with fame and fortune, buildings and
property, prestige and status. The Church began to take on the political
structure of the Roman state. Officials began to be identified by secular
titles such as “prince of the church” (Cardinal) and “lord” (Bishop). While it
is advantageous to have a place to worship and also a structure to maintain a sense
of order, both, however, can also prevent us from encountering God by
presenting an image of God that is quite different from the one that Jesus
revealed.
Writing during the period of
Exile, the prophet Ezekiel dreamed of returning to his home in Israel,
especially to the Temple. His vision narrated in the first reading is of water
flowing from the Temple giving abundant life to the valley below, even to the
arid, lifeless region around the Dead Sea. However, at the time of Jesus, this
life-giving water had dried up and the temple was no longer what it ought to
have been.
The cleansing of the Temple is
an incident that is narrated by all four evangelists. However, there are
significant differences in the manner in which John narrates it when compared with
the Synoptic Gospels. In John, the incident appears at the beginning of the
Gospel and immediately after the Cana miracle of turning water into wine, and
so sets the stage for the kind of revelation of God that Jesus makes in this
Gospel. The temple in Jerusalem was considered the dwelling place of God on
earth and a place where people expected to encounter God in prayer and
sacrifice. However, as is evident in the actions of Jesus, the Temple had
become indeed a market place. When one considered that some trade and exchange
of Tyrian coins for Roman or Greek coins was absolutely necessary for worship
to proceed smoothly, one realizes that this action of Jesus is extremely
radical and goes to the root of the meaning of worship and encountering God.
All religious institutional
rootedness whether in the form of worship, unjust social systems or repressive
religious practices are challenged by this action of Jesus. Zeal for his
Father’s house did indeed consume him, when it led to his passion and death at the
hands of religious authorities. Jesus went even further when he pointed to
himself as the new Temple, the new place of worship. In him a person encounters
God as never before.
Thus, Christians, being
identified with Christ in Baptism, are also temples of God, living temples of
the Holy Spirit. Paul reminds the early Christians of the community at Corinth
that they are themselves God’s Temple. God, in Christ, dwells in each one.
Moreover, the whole community of Christians forms a temple, in which each Christian
is a living stone, with Jesus himself as the cornerstone.
The very orderly, stable and
universal structure is surely to be celebrated in this feast, we also think of
weakness and numerous failures of each of us individuals, who make up the
Church, and the failures and shortcomings of the Church as a whole. Both are in
constant need of cleansing by the head of the Church, Jesus Christ, who
continues to make all things whole.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You may use the "Anonymous" option to leave a comment if you do not possess a Google Account. But please leave your name and URL as www.errolsj.com