
Mark
3:1-6
Introductory Prayer:
Lord, I believe in you. Thank you for the gift of
faith, more precious than life itself. I hope in you. May the dark waters of doubt never break
through my dike of hope. I love you. I want to let you purify me, so that my love for you may be
more ardent and more courageous.
Petition:
Lord, help me to bear witness to
you even in adverse circumstances.
1. "They Watched Him Closely":
At the
beginning of his public ministry, Christ already incurs the bitter opposition of the Pharisees.
Having reduced them to silence in a wheat field, Christ bravely enters the synagogue to confront
them once again. There the Pharisees are in the first places of honor, and they watch his every
move, hoping he will cure against the laws of the Sabbath, so that they might accuse him. The
Pharisees were right about one thing. They did well to observe Christ closely. If only they had done
so with the right spirit: to learn from him and to glorify God for the wonders he did through him.
How closely do we watch Christ in our own lives? How readily do we perceive his actions through
the circumstances of the day? How often do we glorify God for the great things Christ does and longs
to do in us?
2. To Do Good or Evil?
Christ obliges the Pharisees. With
fearless courage he calls the man with the withered hand forward, so that no one can mistake what he
is about to do. Then he puts his antagonists in a dilemma with two clear questions. First: "Is it
lawful to do good on the sabbath rather than to do evil?" "They are bound to admit that it is lawful
to do good; and it is a good thing he proposed to do. They are bound to deny that it is lawful to do
evil; and, yet, surely it is an evil thing to leave a man in wretchedness when it is possible to
help him." (William Barclay, The Gospel of Mark, pp. 68-69) Then Christ asks the second question:
"Is it lawful to save life rather than to destroy it?" "Here he is driving the thing home. He is
taking steps to save this wretched man's life; they are thinking out methods of killing Christ. On
any reckoning it is surely a better thing to be thinking about helping a man than it is to be
thinking of killing a man. No wonder they had nothing to say!" (Ibid.)
3. "Angered by
Their Hardness of Heart":
Seldom does the Gospel show Christ angry. Here his anger is
provoked by the hypocrisy of the Pharisees and their hardness of heart. They close themselves off
from his message of salvation. What happens when someone definitively closes his heart to Christ?
The Pharisees, the defenders of the law and Jewish customs, were bitter enemies of the Herodians,
who collaborated with King Herod and the Romans. Yet this Gospel relates the chilling fact that
these two joined forces to plot to kill Jesus. They are united not by the intrinsic force of
goodness, but by the malignant power of evil. Do I at times make small concessions to hypocrisy,
envy or even hatred? These could slowly harden my heart toward Christ. Am I willing to be
courageous like Christ and endure even bitter opposition for the sake of the
Gospel?
Conversation with Christ:
Thank you, Lord, for your goodness and
courage.
How small I feel when I compare myself with
you in the Gospel. What
an infinite distance separates
us! Thank you for calling me with all of my weakness,
sins, and limitations to be your apostle. Help me never
to surrender to evil
in my heart, but to grow in goodness
of heart in order to be more like
you.
Resolution:
I will do a good deed for someone today, even if it is
difficult, in order to bear witness to Christ.
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