To read the texts click on the texts: 1Kgs 17:10-16; Heb 9:24-28; Mk 12:38-44
The second part of the Gospel story for today is
often referred to as the story of “The Widow’s Mite” where “mite” refers to a
small copper coin. An even better title might be “The Widow’s Plight” because
this is what the story is really about. On the one hand, and at the surface
level, the generosity of the widow’s selfless act is commended by Jesus. This
is also the theme of the first reading in which the Sidonian widow, who gave
generously to Elijah out of her meagre resources, is commended and also rewarded.
On the other hand, however, and at a deeper level, Jesus is pointing out the
plight of the widow and, by doing so, pointing out the plight of the numerous
poor in the Church, and in the world, who are being exploited and divested even
of their meagre possessions.
This kind of exploitation is brought out
powerfully in the famous remark that Bishop Desmond Tutu likes to make often:
“When the missionaries came to Africa, we had the land and they had the Bible.
Then they said ‘Let us pray’ and asked us to close our eyes. When we opened
them, they had the land and we had the Bible”. He does not end here, however.
He adds, “And I think we got the better deal”. The widow in the Gospel text of
today also gets the better deal but there is much that goes on before she does.
What goes on before is the exploitation of the
widow whom organized religion, at the time of Jesus, had indoctrinated and
programmed to give up even her very life. This exploitation is made bare by
Jesus in the first part of today’s Gospel text. It begins with the condemnation
of the “scribes” who here, represent the authorities. The charge against them
is that, not only do they wear their religion on their sleeve for outward show,
but that they also, in the name of religion, “devour widows’ houses”. The “scribes,”
who do not practice religion as they are meant to, are the very ones who
instruct others on what they ought to do.
Widows are not exempted. A widow, at the time of
Jesus, was regarded as a non-entity. She was despised, reviled, and unloved.
She could be taken advantage of merely because she had no man to protect her.
Thus, she could easily become the target for unscrupulous and deceitful men.
This is the kind of person who, in the Gospel text of today, is willing, even
in the dire straits that she is in, to give her all. She will hold nothing
back. This is precisely the reason why Jesus lavishes praise on her. She has
done all that is required of her. She has trusted, she has faith and she shows
this, in action, by giving. In praising the widow, however, Jesus is definitely
not sanctioning the practice of the poor giving to the Temple. This is made
clear in the contrast that he makes between the scribes, who offer from their
abundance, and the widow, who gives generously from her poverty.
It is the practice in some quarters to ask people
to be generous with their money. Often, scripture is quoted to make the point
and what the Lord said about generosity and giving, in quite a different
context, is used by the unscrupulous to fill their coffers. Many TV evangelists
preach what is known as the Prosperity Gospel. These evangelists offer to the
simple “a pie in the sky when you die” kind of hope, while all the time, they
themselves have their pie right here on earth. The Gospel text of today is a
condemnation of such people and practices, no matter under what holy semblance
they may hide. These, who ought to lead people to God, instead lead the money
of the poor to their own treasuries. The condemnation of the scribes is not
merely a condemnation that was relevant 2000 years ago but is a condemnation
relevant today. Whenever the poor are exploited, the condemnation of Jesus is
heard again. Whenever the poor are denied their rights, the condemnation is
heard again. Whenever the poor are taken advantage of, the condemnation is
heard again.
The letter to the Hebrews confirms and affirms
that, with Jesus, it was not a “pie in the sky when you die” kind of existence.
It was a real existence which did not deny the trials and tribulations of life
and so, faced them squarely. It was an existence which was willing to suffer on
earth, not because of the reward in heaven, but because that was the way life
was to be lived. It was an existence in which Jesus was willing to give up his
very life so that others might have life in abundance. Through this kind of
life, Jesus gives a message to all of us who wish to live fully. The message is
this: Salvation is here and now. The life you live now will be the life you
will live in heaven.
The Sidonian widow, who was generous with Elijah,
and the widow in the Gospel text of today, who gave her very self, lived this
kind of life. The scribes did not. Others today, who continue to take advantage
of the poor and oppressed, often in the name of religion, will receive the
harsher condemnation.
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