Friday, August 2, 2024

Friday of the Seventeenth Week in Ordinary Time

(Jeremiah 26:1-9; Matthew 13:54-58)

The Egyptians placed on the throne of David, Jehoiakim, son of Josiah.  But where Josiah was a reformer who tried to call his nation back to their covenant roots, Jehoiakim was a tyrant who drove the people to heathen practices.  He forced them to build magnificent palaces for himself while paying tribute to the Pharoah.  He also permitted the sacrifice of children.  Jeremiah, a true prophet, could hardly allow this to happen without warning everyone of its bitter consequences.

Today’s first reading represents the prophecy Jeremiah makes against the ways of Jehoiakim.  It foretells the destruction of Jerusalem unless the people come back to the Lord’s covenant.  The prophet says that Judah’s people should not think themselves safe because they have the Temple where God is supposed to reside.  Rather, he warns, having the Temple will be of no more benefit than the Northern Kingdom’s shrine at Shiloh protected it from devastation. 

Typical of a prophet, Jeremiah makes Judah’s destruction conditional upon its not returning to God.  He implies that if Juday changes its ways, it might be spared.  People of western civilization today should take heed.  Unless it returns to the ways of righteousness – not necessarily to biblical religion but at least to natural law – western civilization may likewise be destroyed.

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