March 8th 2015. Third
Sunday of Lent
GOSPEL: John
2:13-25
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini,
broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don
Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...
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GOSPEL: John 2:13-25
Just before the Jewish Passover Jesus went
up to Jerusalem, and in the Temple he found people selling cattle and sheep and
pigeons, and the money changers sitting at their counters there. Making a whip
out of some cord, he drove them all out of the Temple, cattle and sheep as
well, scattered the money changers’ coins, knocked their tables over and said
to the pigeon-sellers, ‘Take all this out of here and stop turning my Father’s
house into a market.’ Then his disciples remembered the words of scripture:
Zeal for your house will devour me. The Jews intervened and said, ‘What sign
can you show us to justify what you have done?’ Jesus answered, ‘Destroy this
sanctuary, and in three days I will raise it up.’ The Jews replied, ‘It has
taken forty-six years to build this sanctuary: are you going to raise it up in
three days?’ But he was speaking of the sanctuary that was his body, and when
Jesus rose from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this, and
they believed the scripture and the words he had said.
During his stay in Jerusalem for the Passover many believed
in his name when they saw the signs that he gave, but Jesus knew them all and
did not trust himself to them; he never needed evidence about any man; he could
tell what a man had in him.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ
Kieran’s summary
. . . The Gospel recounts the event of
Jesus purifying the Temple and chasing away the things that should not be
there. There is a clear parallel between the Temple of Jerusalem and the temple
that is our bodies. Each one of us is a temple of the Holy Spirit and in need
of the purifying activity of Jesus. The first reading lists the Ten
Commandments. In the Old Testament these are always referred to as the “Ten Words”.
They were not cold imperatives but statements of a loving dialogue with a
providential Father. The Commandments were kept in the Ark of the Covenant in
the most sacred part of the Temple. In the same way, the most sacred area deep
within each of us should be a place where the word of the Lord dwells. This
Sunday’s Gospel should prompt me to ask myself: What is in my heart? A
relationship of abandonment to the providential love of God? Or a spirit of
profit and self-gain? “To profane the Temple” in the Old Testament meant to place
something that should not be there in the Holy of Holies. May the sacred place
inside of me not be profane! May it be the place of a relationship of trust with
my loving Father!
There
is a parallelism in this text between the purification of the Temple in
Jerusalem and the need to purify what is inside each one of us, since we are temples
of the Holy Spirit.
The
last line of this Gospel is a useful way to approach the meaning of the
passage, even though it would be very easy not to notice it at all. We are told
that Jesus did not need to be told what was in the heart of man, because he
already knew. This verse can be used as a lens for viewing the entire story of
the purification of the Temple. Jesus arrives at the Temple and discovers
animals, doves, money changers and sellers. He fashions a broom and clears all
of them away from the entrance to the Temple. The act is clearly premeditated.
It is not a case of Jesus losing his temper, flying into a fury and losing
control of himself. Such interpretations are inconsistent with the wider picture of this
symbolic, profound action on the part of Jesus. He then makes an extraordinary
prophecy about his Passion and Resurrection. John places this event in the
second chapter of his Gospel, immediately after the miracle at Cana. Matthew,
Mark and Luke recount it to us just as Jesus is entering Jerusalem, shortly
before the Passion. But John describes this event just after his account of the
transformation of the water into wine, using the very jars used by the Jews for
acts of purification. Then he goes to the Temple and cleanses it of the things
that ought not be there.
Jesus
found the spirit of profit and self-gain in the Temple. What does he see when
he gazes inside each one of us?
When the Jewish leaders challenge him about his actions,
Jesus begins to speak in a prophetic way about his own body. This connection
between temple and the body of Christ is something that we are now well
familiar with. The Church is the body of Christ, and each of us is called to be
a temple of the Holy Spirit. John’s account contains allusions to all of these
elements. At the end of the passage he tells us that Jesus knew what was in the
heart of man. In this time of Lent it is important to focus on purification and
on what is needed for a pure and healthy heart. “Purification” means “to pass
through fire”. What is in our hearts that needs to be passed through fire? When
Jesus enters the Temple, he finds merchants. In a parallel way we should
realize that when the Lord looks into the interior of each of us, he finds a
marketplace. He sees habits and attitudes that use the things of God for our
own selfish ends.
The
most sacred area of the Temple used to contain the Ten Commandments. These
commandments represent a relationship of dialogue and trust with God. What is in
inside us, in the most sacred area of our interior lives?
The
first reading contains a statement of the Ten Commandments. What is the
connection between the Commandments and the purification of the Temple? The Ten
Commandments were contained in the Ark of the Covenant, and the Ark was placed in
the most sacred part of the Temple. The Temple was divided into different
sections. The Court of the Gentiles was an area where even the non-Jews could
enter. Then there were areas reserved only for Jews, for the tribe of Levi, for
the priest whose turn it was to offer the sacrifices, and finally there was the
most internal zone, the heart of the Temple, the Holy of Holies where the Ark
was kept. To profane the Temple meant to put something in that area that did
not belong there. When the Gospel says, “Jesus knew what was at the heart of
man”, we should reflect on what ought
to be at the heart of any temple of the Lord. In the Latin tradition we speak
of the “Ten Commandments” but in the Old Testament these were always referred
to as the “Ten Words”. In other words, they were not abstract, cold
imperatives, but a relationship of dialogue with the Lord. What is in man?
Either God is at the heart of each one of us, speaking to us as an intimate
providential Father, or there is deceit, the darkness that comes with refusing
the authority of God. When the latter is the case, profit and conceit take over
in the Temple. Jesus says, “Do not make a market of this place!” Either we have
the paternal wisdom of God at heart, wherein we entrust ourselves to his
providence in the Holy of Holies within each of us, or we are a marketplace,
consumed by a spirit of self-profit that is never satisfied.
May
this Sunday be a time when the sword of God’s word strikes us within, making us
ponder what it is that lies in our hearts! Is it a relationship of trust with
God, or a spirit of egoism and self-gain?
In
this time of Lent we must focus on the state of our hearts. The word of the
Lord this Sunday is like a sword that strikes at us within, enquiring what has
taken the place of the relationship of trust with God. What is within our
hearts? One of the Psalms says: “If you do not speak to me, then I am like one
who goes down in the pit”. But if God speaks to my heart, then I am truly alive,
happy and well.
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