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 Nineteenth Sunday after Trinity

In this second account of the beginning of all things the way in which the man continues the creative work of God is shown by his naming the animals. A thing with no name cannot be fully grasped, is not really complete. So God leads each of the creatures to the man so that he can complete it by pronouncing, ‘You are (let me think, yes) – camel. And you, yes – you are mosquito’ and so on. Under the friendly guidance of God the man completes the divine work of creation. Having joined in the act of creation, the man will take affectionate care of what he has completed.

But none of these is a fit companion, and man remains solitary, miserable and incomplete, without a partner. The Lord God realises that there is something amiss and acts as anaesthetist and surgeon in one, even to the extent of carefully closing up the wound. The man cannot claim that he is the superior as the source of the material, for the Lord God does the work of moulding the woman from the rib just as he had moulded the man from earth. In Hebrew the names are the same too, ish and ishah; it is just that ‘woman’ has a feminine ending. The companionship of man and woman is shown because woman is made from the part closest to man’s heart, the rib, so that with relief and satisfaction the man exclaims, ‘bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh’.

So again we are taught the intimate relationship, the continuity between God and his human creature who is to complete and guard the creation. Again we are taught the affection and partnership of man and woman, this wondrous and trusting love in the innocence of perfect nakedness. There is nothing to hide, so no embarrassment, no threat of danger or exploitation but only confidence and respect for one another. This is the story of how God made things to be, but is it the analysis of how things once were at the very beginning, before evil entered in, or is it the picture of how things will be in the end when evil has been washed away and God’s plans are brought to fulfilment?

The Letter to the Hebrews concentrates on the true humanity of Christ, who is also uniquely exalted, and also on Christ’s priesthood. Here, at the opening of the letter, both these themes are sketched. Christ is higher than the angels, the very powers of God who accomplish the works of God and are the highest of all created beings. It is through these powers of God that God’s will is accomplished, but Christ is incomparably higher than the angels. As ‘the reflection of God’s glory’ and ‘the imprint of God’s being’ Christ is spoken of in terms of God’s Wisdom. In the Old Testament God’s Wisdom is seen as the image, the reflection, the emanation of God through which God creates, and by which God is mirrored in the world, the way in which God’s power and goodness is perceived. At the same time, in history as man, Christ has made purification for sins and has been exalted to the right hand of God. The whole history of salvation is hinted in these phrases, which express both the approach of God to human beings by the incarnation, and the exaltation of humanity by the vindication of Christ at his resurrection and ascension.

The second part of this reading is a meditation or midrash on Psalm 8, applying directly to Jesus what is said in that psalm about humanity in general. The change in sense is legitimised by the expression ‘son of man’, which is the one title which Jesus takes for his own in the gospels. In the psalm itself it is strictly parallel to ‘man’, but Hebrews takes it to apply to Jesus, and goes on from there to deduce Jesus’ special position ‘crowned with glory and splendour’ Jesus himself uses this title deliberately enigmatically, using it to describe both his authority (‘the son of man is Lord of the Sabbath’) and to foretell his Passion (‘the son of man must be rejected’). There has been considerable discussion about whether Jesus intended a reference to the glorious son of man in Daniel 7.13, the son of man who comes to the One of Great Age and receives from him all power on earth. Certainly this passage in Hebrews seems to take that interpretation of the title, seeing Jesus as ‘crowned with glory and splendour’.

However, beyond the psalm, our passage stresses that Jesus was made perfect by suffering, and that his followers too will be made perfect and taken to perfection only by suffering with Christ. This is the beginning of the theme which will be so important throughout the Letter, the self-sacrificial priesthood of Jesus, which will bring all people to salvation.

The Pharisees are putting a trick question to Jesus, as is clear in Matthew’s fuller account. They knew the Law, which permitted divorce, and they will quote this Law to Jesus. The Law allowed divorce for ‘indecency’, but teachers were divided about what this meant: did it mean adultery or a lesser fault? So their real question is what Jesus considers grounds for divorce. As so frequently in his discussions with the legal experts, Jesus goes beyond the question: God made man and woman such that they should bond together permanently and become one thinking, living being. The word used for one ‘body’, or one ‘flesh’, really means one entity, not a hunk of meat, but a single, vibrant personality. God’s intention was not that they should be separable again. So Jesus does not answer the question about grounds for divorce at all. It is striking that here – and on other occasions – Jesus’ authority is such that he feels able to alter the sacred Law of Moses. For the Jews the Law of Moses was God’s own gift, sacred and unalterable by any human authority. By altering it, by annulling the permission for divorce under certain circumstances, Jesus is implicitly claiming divine authority.