To read the texts click on the texts: Isa48:17-19; Mt 11:16-19
In the text of today, Jesus uses an analogy to show
his view of the present generation. One group wants to play a happy game, a
game of joy, a game of a wedding celebration, but the other group will not
join. The first group then agrees to change the game to a game of mourning, a
game of sorrow, a game of funerals, but even with this change, the other group
will not participate.
The latter option corresponds to the gaunt and
ascetic figure of John, whose message of coming judgment was too threatening,
and whose life-style was too unworldly for the sophisticates of “this
generation.” But when Jesus came in meekness, announcing the peaceable kingdom
of unconditional love and forgiveness and celebrating the goodness of life with
all, he was rejected as not “spiritual” enough. “This generation’s” description
of Jesus as a glutton and a drunkard is reminiscent of Deut 21:20, suggesting
more than merely an insult: Jesus is a rebellious Israelite worthy of stoning,
one who should be executed in order to purge evil from the midst of the
covenant community. For you, “the Baptist is a madman because he fasts, while
you want to make merry; me you reproach because I eat with publicans, while you
insist on strict separation from sinners”. You hate the preaching of
repentance, and you hate the proclamation of the Gospel. The change of “all her
children” found in Luke, to “her actions” in Matthew is probably because Matthew
wants to identify Jesus as Wisdom incarnate and not merely as one of Wisdom’s
messengers. Wisdom is proved right by her actions since they are the actions of
Jesus himself.
The mother of a young boy of 10 was at her wits end
when it came to dealing with him. Nothing she did would please him and he would
always complain about something or other. If she fried an egg for him at
breakfast, he would refuse to eat it and ask for a boiled one instead. If she
boiled one the next day, he would ask for a fried egg. This went on and she had
reached the end of her tether. One morning before breakfast, she thought she
would be able to win and so fried one egg and boiled another. The boy came to
the breakfast table, looked at both eggs, and said to his mother; “You fried
the wrong one”.
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