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 Third Sunday of Lent

In our Lenten progress through the story of God’s people we come to the crucial moment of the revelation of God’s name to Moses. This is a decisive moment, because to give your name is a sign of trust and friendship. Someone who has your name has power over you in all kinds of ways, so you give it only to those you trust. The Hebrews, descendants of Abraham, are at a low point, a mere oppressed rabble of immigrants, lacking land or security, marked out for extermination by a powerful bureaucratic state. It is as though God had waited for this moment to raise them up, to create them as a coherent group with a leader who could stand up for them in God’s name. God does not yet give the meaning of the name; perhaps ‘I am who I am’ even means ‘You mind your own business’. It is something to do with Being, and the Greek translation of the Bible understands it as ‘Pure Being’, ‘the One who Is’. In the Hebrew Bible the meaning of the name is given later on Sinai, after Israel’s worship of the Golden Bull, when God passes before Moses crying out the name, ‘The Lord, the Lord, a God of mercy and forgiveness’. This is the meaning which will echo down the Bible in passage after passage.

As in the previous two Sundays, the second reading moves the first reading into a higher gear. God revealed his name to Moses in the desert, led the Israelites across the sea and cared for them in the desert with manna for food and water from the rock to drink. Now Paul explains to us that the real meaning of the rock is Christ who nourishes us. How ‘the rock that followed them’? Paul uses the current rabbinic explanation of the two accounts of Moses striking the rock for water: it is not two accounts of the same incident, but they are separate incidents. The same rock accompanied the Israelites on their journey through the desert. However, Paul is writing to chide the Corinthians on their undisciplined behaviour, especially at the Eucharist. Despite the wonders that accompanied the Israelites, the desert wanderings were a time of infidelity and rebellion which even the God of mercy and forgiveness was compelled to correct. Let the Corinthians learn their lesson! Even though their Christian life was marked by plentiful gifts of the Spirit, they must repent of their wild behaviour.

The events mentioned in the earlier part of the reading, Pilate’s slaughter of worshippers and the collapse of a tower at Siloam (where the gigantic stones of the ancient wall of Jerusalem can still be seen), are not mentioned elsewhere in history. To make the latter case worse, the Galileans could well have been staying in Jerusalem to celebrate a festival. They serve as useful examples of unexpected death and so of the need to be prepared. People can be sagacious about little things in life and blind to more important aspects. Luke has been repeatedly conveying this message by less specific and more general exhortations in this section of the Gospel.

The need for conversion, and above all the persevering patience of God, are lessons which have been stressed throughout Luke’s Gospel from the preaching of John the Baptist onwards. Especially stressed is the joyful welcome offered to the repentant sinner by God (in the story of the Prodigal Son, the lost sheep and lost coin) and by Jesus (the welcome to Zacchaeus and to the ‘Good Thief’). After this it is neat that Luke omits the story of the cursing of the barren fig-tree (Mark 11.12; Matthew 21.28); for him the fig-tree is a symbol of hope, not of disaster.