Tag Archives: Job

4 February 2024: Fifth Sunday of Ordinary time B

Reading 1ResponseReading 2Gospel
 Job 7:1-4, 6-7 Ps 147:1-2, 3-4, 5-6 1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-23 Mk 1:29-39
 RCL: Is 40:21-31  RCL: 1 Cor 9:16-23 

Fitting discipleship and mission into a busy life

During Ordinary time the Lectionary presents stories and teachings from Jesus’ everyday ministry. This week’s readings focus on discipleship, mission, and the burdens of everyday life.

First reading (Job 7:1-4, 6-7)

The first reading is from the book of Job, a post-exilic Wisdom writing that took final form in the fourth century BC. Like other Wisdom writings, Job begins from the human point of view. Job is trying to live wisely every day; when his life falls apart (he loses his family, his wealth, and his health), he begins questioning God and God’s way. Job’s story invites readers to work out their own solutions to Job’s dilemma of why a just person suffers.

In today’s pericope, Job laments that his life has become a struggle (“I have been assigned months of misery”), like all other humans (“life on earth [is a] a drudgery”). The poetic image “my days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle; / and are spent without hope” contains a Hebrew pun. The Hebrew word תִּקְוָה/tiqvâh means both “thread” and “hope.” The weaver’s shuttle moves thread back and forth across the loom; just as weaving ends when the thread runs out, so also life ends when hope runs out. Job’s poetic lament ends in despair (“I shall not see happiness again”).

The Lectionary editors chose this reading because human miseries provide a backdrop for Jesus’ physical and spiritual healings in the gospel.

Second reading (1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-23)

The second reading is the fourth part of a five-week, semi-continuous reading from Paul’s first letter to the Corinth ekklesia. Paul writes to real flesh-and-blood people working out how best to live their faith. Paul teaches disciples to reject any words, actions, or distinctions that disrupt the community’s unity and holiness. Love is the basis and context for community life.

Just before today’s reading, Paul builds a case for his apostolic freedom and his right to support from the Corinth community for his teaching. In today’s pericope, Paul renounces his freedom and his rights to give the Corinth believing community a model of Christian service.

In the pericope’s first part, Paul explains that he preaches the gospel “unwillingly” because God has imposed the “obligation” on Paul. If Paul preached “willingly,” the Corinth believing community (his “stewardship”) would owe him support or payment (“recompense”). Instead, Paul renounces his right to the community’s support (“not make full use of my right”), offering “the gospel free of charge.”

In the pericope’s second part, Paul describes his reason for renouncing his apostolic right (“I am free”): he places himself in service to everyone (“a slave to all”) to win as many people as possible to the gospel. Some powerful people in Corinth exercise their legal rights to oppress and to destroy the socially, politically, or financially weak. Paul chooses to live constrained (“I became weak”) by others’ beliefs “to save at least some.” Paul’s enslavement to others is, paradoxically, true freedom to serve others’ needs.

The Lectionary editors chose this reading to continue Ordinary time’s semi-continuous reading from First Corinthians.

Gospel (Mk 1:29-39)

Mark’s gospel concludes Jesus’ “typical day” at the start of his ministry. Today’s pericope continues from last week’s authoritative teaching and powerful exorcism: Jesus heals Simon’s mother-in-law, heals Capernaum’s physically and spiritually sick, prays in private, and continues his mission.

  • Discipleship. At first glance, the cure of Simon’s mother-in-law looks like a healing story. English translations often bury two important messages. First, Jesus “raises up” (ἐγείρω/egeírō) the woman. This is the same word Mark uses to describe Jesus’ resurrection (Mk 14:28, Mk 16:6). This story foreshadows Jesus’ own raising up and foreshadows the raising of all humans. Second, the woman immediately begins to “serve” or “give hospitality” (διακονέω/diakonéō). This is the same word Mark uses when Jesus says he has come “not to be served, but to serve” (Mk 10:45). Simon’s mother-in-law becomes the first person in Mark’s gospel to act as Jesus does, something his new disciples don’t yet understand (they are happy to be served).
  • Action vs contemplation. Mark shows Jesus engaged in ministry (“For this I have come”) and in private prayer (“He went off to an empty place and prayed there)”. In Galilee, people called the spaces between villages deserted or empty places; Mark’s use of “deserted places” here recalls Jesus’ time in the wilderness (Mk 1:3-13). Mark recognizes the tension between Jesus’ outreach to heal/save and his need to withdraw for private conversation with God. This story suggests that even in the empty places/wilderness Jesus cannot escape the crowds that need his healing/saving.

Summary and reflection

This week’s readings ask us to think about the balance between real life, discipleship’s service, and conversation with God. Job finds real human life so overwhelming he has no time for others. Paul finds time in his busy life to serve everyone. Jesus’ mission to bring God’s reign near through healing and teaching consumes his days, but he makes time to reflect with his Father.

Discipleship is demanding. Our lives can already be so filled with family, work, and friends that adding others who need our attention and service seems impossible. We often have no “empty spaces” for self-reflection and prayer. Yet, in the middle of “full catastrophe living,” God still calls all humans to serve others and encounter the divine. To whom to can give hospitality? Whom can we heal with a simple word or action? Where can we make time to pray? Where is our deserted place to meet God? To what personal mission is God calling us?

—Terence Sherlock

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20 June 2021: Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary time B

Reading 1ResponseReading 2Gospel
 Jb 38:1, 8-11 Ps 107:23-24, 25-26, 28-29, 30-31 2 Cor 5:14-17 Mk 4:35-41
 RCL: Jb 38:1-11  RCL: 2 Cor 6:1-13 

Theophany: exposing and evaluating human limitations

During Ordinary time the Lectionary presents stories and teachings from Jesus’ everyday ministry. This week’s readings focus on personal encounters with God.

First reading (Jb 38:1, 8-11)

The first reading is from the story of Job, part of the Hebrew scripture “Writings” that follow Wisdom traditions. Scholars believe Job was written between the sixth and fourth century BC, after the exile. In today’s pericope, God begins to address Job’s question about undeserved suffering. God appears to Job (a theophany) in the form of a powerful windstorm (“out of the storm”) and asks several rhetorical questions. God asserts God’s utter transcendence (“I shut the sea,” “I made the clouds,” “I set the sea’s limits“) and power over nature (“here shall your proud waves be stilled”). Ancient peoples viewed “wind” and “sea” as uncreated chaos that only the gods could control; in Genesis, God spends two days separating and gathering the primeval waters. The Lectionary editors chose this passages because of God’s power over the wind and sea. In the gospel, Jesus also shows divine control over the same elements.

Second reading (2 Cor 5:14-17)

The second reading is a continuation of Ordinary time’s semi-continuous reading from Paul’s second letter to the Corinth ekklesia. In today’s pericope, Paul contrasts his ministry’s motivation with that of the false teachers besieging the Corinthians. Christ’s love “impels” Paul to begin and to continue his service as an apostle. He offers his insight (“conviction”) that Christ’s love is the reason “one died for all.” That is, Jesus’ physical death reconciled humans to God so that humans could be saved from spiritual death (sin). “Those who live” are alive because of Christ’s gift (his death and resurrection); the gift obligates those who live to live for others (“no longer for themselves”). Before his conversion, Paul “knew” Christ incorrectly (“according to the flesh”), and persecuted Christ and his disciples. As part of his conversion, he now experiences (“knows”) Christ in a different way. To see differently and to be a new creature (“new creation”), disciples must be in Christ; that is, only Christians are “new creations.” Although Christ’s gift enables a new creation, humans must choose to be new people created in Christ (“new things”); the “new” does not automatically replace the “old. The Lectionary editors chose this reading as part Ordinary time’s semi-continuous reading from 2 Corinthians.

Gospel (Mk 4:35-41)

Mark’s gospel begins a collection of stories about Jesus’ “mighty deeds.” Jesus moves beyond Galilee to gentile territory; this is the first of several trips Jesus makes across the Sea of Galilee, a symbolic barrier between Jews and gentiles. This story signals a change in Mark’s gospel, from Jesus’ teachings to Jesus’ works of power.

  • “Bad” weather. The Sea of Galilee is noted for its violent squalls that can arise without warning, as wind is funneled through the steep valleys among the hills surrounding the lake. As today’s first reading suggests, the wind and sea also represent the primeval chaos that only God can contain. (For God’s power over the sea, see Ps 42:7-8, Ps 65:7-8, Ps 89:8-9, Ps 107:23-32). The disciples fear the primal spirits are stronger than Jesus.
  • An exorcism. In quieting the storm, Jesus exercises the same power or authority that he uses to cast out demons and to perform mighty works of healing. Nature miracles and healing miracles point to the inbreaking of God’s kingdom, restoring the order present at creation, and subjugating all things to the rule of God (“God’s reign” or “the kingdom of God”).
  • Awe before the divine. The disciples move from fear (“we are perishing”) to the numinous sense of awe that is part of a theophany or a human experience of divine power. Mark recounts fear and awe as part of the disciples’ learning process, which leads them to question more deeply Jesus’ nature and mission (“who is this?”). This story reminds Mark’s community that Jesus’ saving presence continues amid persecutions that threaten their existence.
Summary and reflection

This week’s readings ask us to think about our encounters with the divine. God reveals God’s total otherness to Job, challenging Job’s human view of God. Paul shares his conversion experience, urging them to think beyond their fleshy worldview. Jesus’ authority over wind and wave spirits change the disciples’ understanding of their teacher. A personal encounter with the divine reframes our perspective; it is an opportunity to experience a reality greater than ourselves. Like Job, do we seek to understand and to accept our place in an ambiguous universe? Like Paul, do we allow a divine encounter to make us anew completely and permanently? Like Jesus’ disciples, can we move beyond our fear of the radically Other to awe, appreciation, and worship?

—Terence Sherlock

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7 February 2021: Fifth Sunday of Ordinary time B

Reading 1ResponseReading 2Gospel
 Jb 7:1-4, 6-7 Ps 147:1-2, 3-4, 5-6 1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-23 Mk 1:29-39
 RCL: Is 40:21-31  RCL:1 Cor 9:16-23 

Lessons in discipleship, mission, and ministry

During Ordinary time the Lectionary presents stories and teachings from Jesus’ everyday ministry. This week’s readings focus again on mission, ministry, and discipleship.

The first reading is from the book of Job. Job is a just and righteous man who suddenly loses his wealth and family, and struggles with the question of how a just God can allow human suffering. Job’s friends offer platitudes intended to comfort him. In today’s pericope, Job rejects their pious arguments. Illness, poverty, and family loss (which his friends have not experienced) entitle Job to question God. Job catalogues his complaints: human life is “drudgery,” filled with “longing” and “waiting” for relief. Insomnia (“the night drags on”) replaces sleep; life ends “without hope” or “happiness.” The Lectionary editors chose this reading because Job’s list of human miseries provide a backdrop for Jesus’ physical and spiritual healings in the gospel.

The second reading is a continuation of Ordinary time’s semi-continuous reading from Paul’s first letter to the Corinthian ekklesia. In today’s pericope, Paul describes his apostleship and discipleship as “slavery to Christ.” As Christ’s slave, Paul is compelled to preach the good news. He can preach either unwillingly (as a slave’s “obligation”) or willingly (with a reward). Paul preaches willingly; his reward (“recompense”) for preaching the gospel is that he can offer the gospel free of charge to the Corinth ekklesia. Paul’s enslavement to Christ make him free to enslave himself to all to win the salvation of all though the gospel. Scripture scholars see parallels in Paul’s slavery and Jesus’ sayings about service (for example, Mk 10:44). By “becoming all things to all people,” Paul shares (“I too have a share”) in the gospel by living out the gospel’s message: love the neighbor. The Lectionary editors chose this reading as part Ordinary time’s semi-continuous reading from 1 Corinthians.

Mark’s gospel concludes Jesus’ “day of ministry” with a discipleship story and continues with stories of Jesus’ mission and ministry.

  • Discipleship story. Jesus’ cure of Peter’s mother-in-law is a lesson in discipleship. After her healing encounter with Jesus, she begins serving (“waited on”) her guests. Mark uses the same Greek word for her service (διακονέω/diakoneó) that Jesus uses to describe ideal leadership as the humble service of others as well as Jesus’ own mission (Mk 10:45).
  • Ministry story. Mark shows Jesus healing the sick who crowd around Peter’s door. The Greek word Mark uses can mean “to cure” or “to heal” or “to serve,” and is the root of the English word “therapy.” Unlike other healers, wonder-workers, or magicians, Jesus’ healings are not ends in themselves; his actions are a sign that God’s kingdom is near. Jesus comes to serve others; his disciples must follow his example.
  • Mission story. Jesus tells his new disciples, “This is why I have come out.” The Father sends Jesus to preach the good news that God’s reign is near. Jesus’ actions (healing and expelling evil) and words (preaching) make God’s kingdom present in the lives of the people he encounters. After training his disciples, he sends them to continue his mission.

This week’s readings ask us to think about our mission and ministry as disciples. Job lists real human needs that require ministry, not platitudes. Paul’s enslavement to serve the weak expresses the depth of his discipleship. Jesus reveals his mission and ministry to his new disciples, and gives them examples to follow. As disciples, we are charged with continuing Jesus’ mission and ministry. What kind of disciple are we? Do we act in service to others, or simply spout pious words? Are we willing to serve all, or only those we judge deserving of our efforts? Does our service reveal the Jesus whom everyone seeks, or does it point back to our own importance?

—Terence Sherlock

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