Today,
we will center our attention in the piercing question Jesus asked the
Pharisees: «Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath or not?»
(Lk 14:4), and in their very significant silence, as per St.
Luke: «But no one answered» (Lk 14:4).
Many
are the Evangelic episodes whereby Our Lord reproaches their
hypocrisy to the Pharisees. It is quite noteworthy God's outstanding
interest in substantiating up to which point He dislikes this sin
—false appearances, deceitful actions—, which is placed
at the antipodes of Christ's praise to Nathaniel: «Here is a
true Israelite. There is no duplicity in him» (Jn 1:47).
God loves the heart's simplicity, the spirit's naivety while, on the
other hand, He rejects with energy the intricacies, the shady looks,
the double standards, the hypocrisy.
That which is
significant in the Lord's question and in the Pharisees' silent reply
is the bad conscience they had, deep inside. There was a man
suffering from dropsy who was looking forward to be healed by Jesus.
The fulfillment of the Judaic Law —ludicrous concentration in
the letter with total disdain of the spirit— and the empty
presumption of their blameless behavior, brings them to appear
shocked by the attitude of Christ who, carried away by his merciful
heart, does not allow any legal formalisms to prevent him from
healing he who is ailing.
The Pharisees realize
that their hypocrite behavior cannot be justified and this is what
keeps them silent. In this passage a very clear lesson is shining:
the need to understand that saintliness is to follow Christ —to
full enamorment— and not to coldly fulfill some legal precepts.
The Commandments are saint because they come all the way directly
from God's infinite Wisdom, but it is quite possible to live them in
a legalist and empty way, and it is then when the incongruence
appears —truly sarcasm— of pretending to follow God and
ending up by going behind ourselves.
Let the charming
simplicity of the Mother of God direct our lives.