July 27, 2024
Jay Carney
Creighton University's Department of Theology
click here for photo and information about the writer

Saturday of the Sixteenth Week in Ordinary Time
Lectionary: 400

Jeremiah 7:1-11
Psalms 84:3, 4, 5-6a and 8a, 11
Matthew 13:24-30

Praying Ordinary Time

Weekly Guide for Daily Prayer


Today’s psalm offers a beautiful ode to humanity’s fundamental orientation to praise, worship, and enjoy God. In coming home to the house of the Lord, the Psalmist encounters not just the God of his ancestors, but the living God of the present moment. There is a contemplative dimension to Psalm 84, calling us not so much “to do,” but simply “to be” – to spend time with God in prayer, to let our hearts bask in God’s love, to rest in the courts of the Lord. One can see why the American songwriter Matt Redman’s “Better is One Day,” based on this psalm, became such a huge praise and worship hit. 

But the allure of worship can also be a danger, as the prophet Jeremiah reminds us in this challenging first reading. Having served as a greeter at my own parish, I couldn’t help but marvel at Jeremiah’s audacity…and question whether anyone so greeted would come back the next week! But Jeremiah is audacious because God is calling the people to return to the heart of Israel’s law, namely the intertwining of the love of God and the love of neighbor (Deuteronomy 6:5; Leviticus 19:18). Jeremiah recognizes the ever-present danger that religious piety and worship become escapist or compartmentalized from the rest of our lives. Orthodoxy, literally “right worship,” requires orthopraxis, or “right action.” Nor does Jeremiah speak in vague platitudes. Rather, the call to charity and justice is tangible: we should “deal justly with the neighbor,” respect the “resident alien, the orphan, and the widow,” stop the theft, murder, adultery, and lies, and refuse to run after the idols and strange gods that deceitfully promise a fortune in exchange for our obeisance.

Held together, then, Jeremiah 7 and Psalm 84 cut to the heart of the good news of the Jewish and Christian traditions. God calls us to a holistic gospel, connecting mind, body, and spirit, inner and outer, personal and social. We are called to recognize that genuine spirituality entails reforming our lives and reflecting in action what we profess with our lips. Yearn and pine for the courts of the Lord, yes, but first love your neighbor and do justice to the innocent. Then, by the grace of God, may we be counted among the wheat on the day of final harvest.   

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