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Scripture In Depth
13th Sunday of Ordinary Time C
June 26, 2022
Reginald H. Fuller

Reading I: 1 Kings 19:16b, 19-21

It is instructive to compare Elijah’s call of Elisha with Jesus’ call of his disciples as related in the Gospel for this Sunday.

Elisha said, “Let me kiss my father and my mother, and I will follow you.” When Jesus called two would-be disciples, one said, “Lord, let me first go and bury my father.”

Elisha’s call is one that could be added to already existing responsibilities.

With Jesus’ call it is different. All existing responsibilities have to be given up. They may be given back as part of the total call, but always as only part of it, enclosed within it, and subordinated to it.

The second difference is that Elijah’s mantle falls upon Elisha. He can succeed him, become a prophet like his master when the latter finally departs (2 Kgs 2ff).

But when Jesus ascends to heaven, his followers do not replace him. They remain followers, and he remains present as their living Lord.

Responsorial Psalm: 16:1-2, 5, 7-8, 9-10, 11

The early Church seized upon this psalm as a prophecy of Christ’s resurrection.

In his Pentecost sermon as presented in Acts, Peter quotes Ps 16:9-11. Once again, the “I” of the psalms is the “I” of the living Christ.

But it also includes the members of his body, and so we may take this psalm upon our own lips and make it a prayer of praise for our inheritance for our call into the life of Christ.

Reading II: Galatians 5:1, 13-18

Freedom is the hallmark of Christian existence. But this freedom is constantly threatened.

For the Galatians it was threatened because they were succumbing to the blandishments of Paul’s opponents and falling prey to some kind of syncretism that included circumcision.

For Paul, this completely undermines the gospel.

Christians are free because they do not have to acquire salvation by their own works; but because they have already been given salvation as a gift, they are free to work it out in obedience. This is the positive truth behind what gained popularity in the sixties as “situation ethics.”

There is one obligation for Christians, and that is the law of love. “The whole law is fulfilled in one word, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”

Paul does not overlook the first and greatest commandment—the love of God; he is speaking to those who have already heard the message of justification, and who have therefore been brought into the love of God.

Paul is talking about how that love of God can only express itself historically as love of neighbor. Love of neighbor should provide the Christian with a set of antennae (J.A.T. Robinson), enabling him/her to know in each concrete situation what that love requires, without a lot of rules and regulations.

The guidance needed is provided by the “as yourself”: Do to others as you would have them do to you.

  “Flesh” and “Spirit” in the last paragraph are not our so-called higher and lower natures, though they are frequently thus misunderstood, even in modern translations.

  “Flesh” is our old, unredeemed humanity in its totality, including what we call our “higher nature.”

  “Spirit,” as the capitalization suggests, is the Spirit of God, the eschatological possibility that transforms our whole human nature, lower as well as higher, so called

Gospel: Luke 9:51-62

The latter part of the Gospel (the call of the would-be followers) has been sufficiently treated above under the Old Testament reading. Here we will concentrate on the former part.

The suggestion of James and John that fire should be called down from heaven to punish the Samaritans who would not receive Jesus “because his face was set toward Jerusalem” recalls their nickname, “Sons of thunder” (Boanerges).

Recently attempts have been made to associate Jesus with the Zealots, the revolutionary liberationists of the day. That several of Jesus’ disciples (for example, Simon the Zealot) had Zealot sympathies cannot be doubted.

It seems probable that Jesus felt the constant temptation to seek an easy way out for his mission by adopting the Zealot line (O Cullmann). But this was for him precisely that, a temptation, and one that he constantly resisted and that brought him, humanly speaking, to the cross.

This recent controversy is a warning against the “peril of modernizing Jesus” (HJ Cadbury).

Every new movement of thought seeks to enlist Jesus on its side. But he remains himself, the judge of all human causes. He turns and rebukes James and John!

Reginald H. Fuller
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Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today

Reginald H. Fuller and Daniel Westberg. Liturgical Press. 1984 (Revised Edition), pp. 478-480.

Preaching the Lectionary

Liturgical Press


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