Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Tuesday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time

(Jonah 3:1-10; Luke 10:38-42)

Most likely St. Luke intended that today’s gospel be read in tandem with yesterday’s.  He often pairs stories of a woman and a man.  After Mary delivers her canticle praising God, Zachariah pronounces his.  After Simeon recognizes Jesus as the Christ child, Ana makes a similar declaration.  Later in the gospel Jesus tells the parable of the woman searching for her lost drachma after relating the one of the shepherd and lost sheep.  Evidently Luke wants his readers to know that Christ calls women as well as men to follow him.

Yesterday’s parable and today’s report of Jesus visiting the home of Martha and Mary bear another sign of inclusiveness.  Both break through the boundaries of custom and, indeed, of established order.  Samaritans were to be distrusted, yet the one in the parable saves the Jewish man’s life.  Women were to serve in the home, yet Mary takes her seat as Jesus’ primary disciple.  Jesus breaks the rules of propriety although not of the moral law.  He is saying the God loves all and wants all to know and love Him.

Customs and order enable us to function well, especially when there is a lot to do.  But we should not be so tied to their rules that we lose sight of other values which can have precedence.  Certainly we want to include women as well as men in the story of salvation.  Likewise we want to teach women as well as men about God and His love for all.