Saturday, September 1, 2018

22nd Ordinary Sunday, Year B, 02.09.2018

Deuteronomy 4:1-2, 6-8 / James 1:17-18, 21-22, 27 / Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23
As we begin the month of September, we also begin a time when temperatures start to rise. We may think that the weather is already hot enough, so is it going to be hotter, or what?

But we are not talking about the weather. We are talking about a “fever” – the exam fever.

In fact it has already begun. The PSLE Oral exams are just over; the written exams will start at the end of September. The Sec 4s just finished their prelims and the “N” levels and “O” levels are the next big thing that is coming up.

And across the board, the students are preparing for their year-end exams. So the fever is going to rage.

And just as fever is usually felt around the head, exam fever is also felt around the head. Exams are about the measurement and grading of the memory and the academic ability. It is about how good the head can perform when subjected to exams.

So it can be said that the purpose of exams is to grade the students on their academic abilities with the objective of making them clever and smart.

And that is because the world rewards those with  high academic qualifications. The world rewards those who are clever and smart.

And we need to have a head that is clever and smart if we want to make it in life and succeed in this world.

So for those who don’t have much in their heads, they will have to make up for it by working hard with their hands. One way or another, we will have to express who we are and what we can do with either head knowledge or hard work.

In the gospel, there seems to be some argument over the head and the hands. The Pharisees and the scribes who have a head filled with the knowledge of the Law and the religious traditions, questioned Jesus as to why His disciples do not respect the traditions of the elders and eat their food with unclean hands, i.e. hands that were washed in ritualistic way.

But Jesus moved the question of the state of the hands to the state of the heart, as He quoted from the passage of the prophet Isaiah: “This people honours me only with lip-service, while their hearts are far from me. The worship they offer me is worthless”. 

In effect Jesus is telling the Pharisees and the scribes that they may be clever and smart when it comes to the Law and the traditions.

But what about their hearts and what about the worship that they offer to God?

In this world, whether it is in the area of education or business, it is about how clever we are and how smart we are. It is all about the head.

But Jesus turns our attention to our hearts. Are our hearts with God, or are they far from God? So it is not just about clean hands; it is about clean hearts.

Well, talking about clean hands, we know that there is a life-sized statue of Jesus the Sacred Heart at entrance of the church. It is quite a unique statue.

The hands of that statue are stretched downwards,  and within our reach, if we are tall enough. If not we can still touch the feet of that statue.

There have been comments about the hands and feet of that statue, especially the hands. Some have commented that the paint on the hands are worn out and looks “dirty”, so why not repaint the hands at least.

Yes, people touch those hands of the statue of Jesus, and hence the paint gets worn out and it does look a bit soiled, though we clean those hands every day.

Those soiled hands may not look that pretty, but there is a teaching point in them. Jesus is like reaching out to us and asking us to touch His hands and to give Him all that is unclean in our hearts.

And Jesus tells us what are the things that are lurking in our hearts: fornication, theft, murder, adultery, avarice, malice, deceit, indecency, envy, slander, pride, folly.

Yes, all these evil things come from within and make our hearts unclean.

We have at least one or more of those sins. Jesus is asking us to touch His hands and to give it to Him. He came to take away our iniquities and to carry our diseases.

Jesus came to cleanse us, to heal us and to make our hearts like His. Let us look at His Heart and let us ask Him to make our hearts clean, to heal our hearts of sin, so that we can offer God a pure and worthy sacrifice.