Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity 2021
Gospel: Mark 7:1-8, 14, 15, 21-23
This Sunday’s Gospel is a passage from the
Gospel According to Mark. At face value, it appears to recount a confrontation
between the Pharisees, who are hung up on rules, and Jesus, who advocates
personal choice. But if we take a second glance, look beneath the surface, that
might not be what is going on after all.
It is worth noting that the Pharisees have not
come looking for a fight. They have come, a distance, to see Jesus, exploring
the idea that this might be one sent by God. And when they witness Jesus’
disciples doing something that causes them cognitive dissonance—if this man
is from God, why are his disciples flouting the rules?—they ask Jesus for
clarification. On all counts, we would do well to learn from them.
Jesus responds by calling them hypocrites.
Literally, people who wear masks, face masks. Actors, playing a part. But not a
word that necessarily carries the negative value judgement that it has come to
convey since.
The conversation centres on the idea of ‘defilement’—koine,
literally making something common, stripping it of its specialness, its
sacredness. And here it is worth noting that the entire of the New Testament
was written in defiled Greek, koine Greek, as opposed to high, classical
Greek. Written in the common tongue, of Gentiles and Jews, of the common
people.
The Pharisees ask, why do your disciples eat
in the way that is common of all the surrounding peoples, and not in the way
that marks us Jews as set apart? The Jewish laws concerning hygiene were
inspired, and deeply practical. Centuries later, when bubonic plague swept
through Europe, Jewish hygiene observance kept them safe—set apart—from the
devastating loss of lives suffered by their Gentile neighbours. Why forsake
that kind of literally life-saving practice?
That’s when Jesus calls them hypocrites—mask-wearers—not
because of the rules they kept, but because the outward observance or
appearance was not aligned with their inward attitude. Though their actions
were aligned with the wisdom of God, as shared with humanity, their hearts were
not aligned with the heart of God towards humanity.
Jesus goes on to make it clear that nothing
that goes into a person can defile them, can strip them of their specialness,
their sacredness. But what comes out of them can.
Nothing that goes into a person can strip them
of their God-given specialness. Not even a virus. This weekend, I stepped in to
cover a wedding that was supposed to have been taken by another vicar in the
deanery, who, the day before, had discovered that he had Covid. He is presently
unable to do the things he is set apart to do; but Covid does not negate his
vocation. And even if, in the most extreme of instances, Covid should kill us,
it cannot separate us from the love of God.
That said, what comes out of us can defile us.
The belief that we are more important than others, that we can act with
impunity, exercising our rights in our self-interest, without concern for our
neighbours.
Until recently here in the UK, it was legally
mandatory to wear a mask in public, for the common good, in a pandemic. Since
then, the rules have changed. The law has been stripped of its special status,
its sacredness. Now it is down to the individual to exercise their own
judgement, their freedom of conscience, to wear a mask or not according to
their own personal choice. Under such circumstances, what ought we to do? At
the wedding I took, for my friend who had Covid, not one of the sixty + guests
chose to wear a mask.
It should be clear by now that we cannot
simply read off what to do by how we read a particular passage from the Bible.
What such a passage might do, however, is help us to navigate complex and
confusing circumstances, from a faith perspective.
We continue, for now, to wear masks when we
gather, out of love for our neighbour. But masks are not enough. The outward
expression must be in line with our heart, which in turn must seek to be in
line with God’s heart. If we wear a mask, but despise those who don’t, we miss
the mark. We might protect them from Covid, but not from the virus of our
hatred. We wear a mask, and sanitise our hands, and keep our distance, for the
common (koine) good of a defiled (koine) people.
On the other hand, to refuse to wear a mask,
and take other simple and reasonable precautions for the common good, because
we see these things as a taking away of our liberty, is to abandon the law of
God, which is summed up in the command to love our neighbour as ourselves.
As we navigate a season where we will wear a
mask on some occasions, and not others; where we will wash our hands, perhaps
more often than before Covid but not as often as we have become accustomed to;
whether we choose observance or not to observe certain practices, our guide
should be the law of love. May we continue to grow as such disciples. May we,
like the Pharisees, continue to seek Jesus, to see him more clearly, to love
him more dearly, and follow him more nearly, day by day.
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