There are some marital vows pledged to the people of Israel through the Prophet Hosea in today’s first reading. Israel has heard herself called “unfaithful” and referred to as a prostitute, but God comes courting her. To do so, “God will have to woo her out into the desert.”
Jesus, in today’s gospel, refers to Himself as a “bridegroom,” Who endorses the not-fasting by His disciples while He the, bridegroom, is still with them. This is something new, because the religious leaders and even the followers of John the Baptist keep the tradition of fasting. Jesus refers to His teachings as “new cloth” and “new wine” which can not be associated in any way with the old traditions. Rather, new wine is poured into “new wineskins.” The new teachings and relationship with the loving God is being poured into new hearts and only those who have new hearts can wear the “new cloak.”
As beautiful as these readings are today, we must rejoice and enjoy what Paul writes about us in today’s second reading.
We all carry around with us some form of personal validation and identity, usually in a plastic or laminated form. Some may have our pictures on them, others define us in numerical configurations. Paul, for his credentials claims us as his letters, “You are our letter, written on our heart, known and read by all.” As letters, we are not written in ink, “but by the Spirit of the living God.”
This is more “new wine” for us to drink deeply. We recently sent Valentine cards to those we love. Jesus is sent to us to be both, the wedding announcement and the “bridegroom.” We are the stamped, sealed and delivered reports of the marriage consummated in the life, death and resurrection of that same Jesus.
Those valentines were paper symbols, which were trying to express varying degrees of affection. Jesus sends us as His letters to His beloved and espoused creation, and not with varying degrees of affection, but with as much of His love as we have drunk and worn.
We are invited to be lured out into the desert to hear God’s love for us. We are so busy, we say, “Is there a ‘virtual desert’ we can find on the net?” We find it hard to find time to write letters even to our best friends. It does take time and silence to hear God writing, through the Spirit, a letter of love, upon our hearts. For all our business, we would stop to listen to someone telling us of his or her love for us. God is always courting us and sending us and wouldn’t it be terrible to be an empty envelope, sent by God, but nothing inside?
Today’s readings are a new variety of wine and a new cloth meant to catch our attention and our hearts. We are in the “sent items” file and not the “delete.” The “bridegroom” wishes to embrace us and then make Himself believable by how we ware our “new cloaks,” and this is how we are dressed, addressed and sent as living letters, from God to those beloved in Christ.
Rev. Larry Gillick, SJ
I entered the Society of Jesus in 1960, after graduating from Marquette University High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attending St. Norbert College for two years. I was ordained in 1972 after completing theological studies at the Toronto School of Theology, Regis College. I presently minister in the Deglman Center for Ignatian Spirituality at Creighton and give retreats.
I enjoy sharing thoughts on the Daily Reflections. It is a chance to share with a wide variety of people in the Christian community experiences of prayer and life which have been given to me. It is a bit like being in more places than just here. We actually get out there without having to pay airlines to do it. The word of God is alive and well.
