
RVC’s
Weekly Spiritual Essay
July
24, 2005: SEVENTEENTH SUNDAY OF
THE YEAR
Readings
I Kings
3:5, 7-12
Romans
8:28-30
Matthew
13:44-52
The late
scholar of biblical Wisdom literature, Fr. Roland Murphy, always began his
Wisdom 101 classes with today’s I Kings passage. He believed it contained the best definition of the subject
he taught.
Yahweh
tells Solomon, “Ask something of me and I will give it to you.” The king surprises everyone, not by
asking “for a long life . . . nor for riches, nor for the life of (his)
enemies.” Instead, he makes this
request: “Give your servant an understanding heart to judge your
people and to distinguish right from wrong.
Fr.
Murphy always emphasized that a biblically wise person is someone who looks at
life with an “understanding heart.”
In the culture of the I Kings author, the heart was thought to perform
many of the functions which we today attribute to the brain. It wasn’t just the organ of
emotions. It was the source of
thought and reasoning. That’s why
Solomon desires a proper heart; one which would help him judge reality with the
understanding with which Yahweh judges it. If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then understanding
is in the heart of the believer.
As we
hear in our Romans pericope, Paul has such a heart. Notice the statement he makes at the beginning of the
passage. “We know that all things
work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his
purpose.” The Apostle presumes
everyone experiences the same basic reality. What’s important isn’t what happens in life, it’s how we
interpret what happens. Paul is
convinced that our faith provides our interpretation. Without an understanding, faith-filled heart, we have no
basis for judging the everyday events of our lives.
Matthew’s
Jesus continues what he began in last week’s gospel: providing more parables to
help us better understand God working in our midst. But unlike last week’s images, today he zeroes in our
response to that presence.
“The
kingdom of heaven,” Jesus first teaches, “is like a treasure buried in a field,
which a person finds ...” Then he offers a parallel idea, “Again, the kingdom
of heaven is like a merchant searching for fine pearls. When he finds a pearl of great price .
. .” In each case, finder “goes and sells all she or he has and buys “the
treasure.”
Jesus’
message is clear: If discovering God at work in our lives is the most valuable
dimension of our existence, then we should be willing to sacrifice anything and
everything to acquire it.
Of
course, such a long-sought-for experience doesn’t happen in isolation from
everything else that runs through our lives. That’s why Jesus adds one more parable. “The kingdom of heaven is like a net
thrown into the sea, which collects fish of every kind. When it is full, they haul it ashore
and sit down to put what is good into buckets. What is bad they throw away.”
Though
Matthew’s gospel interpretation springs from his concept of the “last
judgment,” scholars believe the historical Jesus originally intended the
separation of good from bad to pertain to our role in the process. Day by day we must use our
understanding hearts to determine what is from God in our lives and what isn’t.
No wonder
Matthew ends the passage with Jesus describing the evangelist himself: “a
scribe . . . instructed in the kingdom of heaven . . . who brings from his
storeroom both the new and the old.”
Only someone wise in the faith knows what to keep of the old and what to discard of the new. An understanding heart is always able to figure out the proper combination. If we don’t, then God’s kingdom is solely something which happened in the past, or an event we’re anticipating only in the future, not an experience for followers of God right here and now.