The
Second Temple stood in Jerusalem for over 400 years. It was 1600 feet long, 900 feet wide, 9
stories high, and its main walls were built with 30 ton bricks. But Jesus wandering in a field with his
disciple munching on someone else’s corn: this was something greater than
that. The Temple was the site of
passionate, lavish, exquisitely celebrated festivals of joy, mourning and
sacrifice. But Jesus and his rag tag
band: that was something greater. The
Temple was the symbol of national and religious pride, the site of the Chanukah
miracle, celebrating Jewish defeat of pagan idolatry. But this lax, hungry group: something
greater.
It’s
pretty outrageous actually when you think about it: Jesus compares stopping for
a snack on a walk to the work the priests do serving in the Temple on Sabbaths.
A
simple snack… Sharing food… Relieving hunger… Companionship on a journey. Humdrum or profound: any moment is
transformed by Jesus’ presence. What
would it look like if we were invoke and be mindful of the transforming presence
of Jesus at every moment of our lives?
The
liturgy schools us, trains us and inculcates in us that will to invite and
welcome Jesus. Here, by calling down the
Spirit, Christ transforms sacramentally so that we munch not on corn, but on
his body – a greater sacrifice than the already great sacrifices offered in the
Temple. Christ stands ready to transform
all.
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