Today,
as yesterday, Jesus has to contend with the
Pharisees, who are distorting Moses' Law, by highlighting the letter
of the law while ignoring the actual spirit of the Law. The Pharisees
accuse, indeed, Jesus' disciples of violating the Sabbath (cf. Mk
2:24). According to their overwhelming casuistry, to pick the heads
of grain means “to reap”, while crushing them in their
hands signifies “to thresh”: these agricultural tasks
—and some forty other— were forbidden on the Sabbath, as
a day of rest. As we already know, the breads of offering the Gospel
speaks of, were twelve breads that were placed every week in the
sanctuary table, as a tribute from the twelve tribes of Israel to
their God and Lord.
Abiathar's
attitude is the same one Jesus is teaching us today: the less
important precepts of the Law have to give way before the most
important ones; a ceremonial precept has to give way to a precept of
the natural law; the precept of resting on the Sabbath should not,
therefore, prevail over the basic needs of subsistence. The II
Vatican Council, was inspired by the previous example, and to
underline that people have to prevail over economic and social
questions, says: «Social order and its progressive development
have to subordinate always to persons' welfare, because things are
made for man and not the other way round. The Lord pointed it out
already when He said the Sabbath was made for man and not man
for the Sabbath (cf. Mk 2:27)».
Saint
Augustine also says: «Love and do as you please».
Have you understood it well or are you still under the obsession
secondary things overrule the love we have to place on whatever we
do? To work, forgive, correct, attend Mass on Sundays, take care of
sick people, abide by the commandments..., do we do it because we
have to or because of our love for God? If only these
considerations may help us to revitalize all our deeds with the love
our Lord has instilled in our hearts, precisely so that we can also
love him.