Sunday Readings Commentary

Father Andrew Wadsworth offers a short commentary on this week's Sunday Lectionary readings.

To read the relevant Bible passage just click on the reference.

Before reading and reflecting on God's word you might like to use the following prayer:

O Lord,
who hast given us thy word
for a light to shine upon our path:
Grant us so to meditate upon that word
and follow its teaching,
that we may find in it the light that shineth
more and more unto the perfect day:
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

The Second Sunday before Advent

This passage looks towards the end of all things. It is a crucial passage, for here, for the first time in the Bible, the resurrection of the dead is proclaimed. The Book of Daniel was written during a great persecution of the Jews a couple of centuries before Christ. It was then that finally the resurrection of those who remain true to the Lord was revealed. The earlier Israelites pictured the after-life as a sort of powerless, shadowy half-existence in Sheol, where the dead could not even praise God. Yet there had been many hints of conviction that God would never desert those who love him: ‘I know that my Redeemer lives, and that from my flesh I will look on God,’ said Job. Only now, under the stress of the death of martyrs in the persecution, is the full truth revealed: at the end of time God will intervene to draw his own to himself in fullness of life. In this reading ‘many will awaken’ does not mean that some will not awaken; it merely indicates a vast number, the almost limitless multitude of the dead.

Today’s reading, the last in this series about the efficacy of Christ’s single sacrifice, contrasted with the repeated sacrifices of the Old Law, sums up the whole argument. But it also moves into a new key, concentrating not on the saving and cleansing effect of the blood of Christ. Instead, it moves into the sphere of Psalm 110 (Psalm 109), the personal exaltation of Christ. By means of this Psalm, drawn from the Jerusalem liturgy, it meditates the acceptance by God of Christ’s sacrifice. The sacrifice and the sealing of the new covenant in his blood is only the first act in the drama; it must yet be completed by God’s response. The resurrection is God’s response to the sacrifice of Christ, placing him at God’s right hand, where he awaits the final consummation when ‘all his enemies will be made a footstool for him’.

Finally this meditation on the Psalm is rounded off by a confirmation from Jeremiah’s much-loved promise of the New Covenant, promising forgiveness and an unprecedented personal closeness to God of every individual of the Chosen People.

These verses open the chapter known as little apocalypse. What does this mean? The writer of this gospel believes that the events surrounding the destruction of Jerusalem and the persecution suffered by Jesus's followers are part of a larger conflict between the forces of good and evil that would end only with the return of Jesus. The sombre tone of the chapter with a future which would include natural disasters, wars and social dislocation Is underlining that only Jesus will not provide an escape from difficulties in suffering; in fact, it may make life more difficult. The whole chapter speaks of a day when the liberation by Jesus from the grip of evil will be complete. When the son of man sends his angels to gather the elect from the corners of the earth. The terrible suffering I had are only a print to a new day. This chapter is fundamentally hopeful. Everything depends on what God is yet to do. And what God has yet to do is bound up with what God does in the ministry of Jesus. Trusting God with the future depends completely on what God will do when Jesus has been tried, mocked, and executed. The forecast of Jesus points ahead to this climax of the gospel story.