Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time / Msgr. Owen F. Campion 			
			The Sunday Readings
			
	       The Book of Deuteronomy is the source of the first reading for Mass  this weekend. Deuteronomy is from the Pentateuch, the collection of five  books that appears as a group at the beginning of the present versions of the  Bible.
The Book of Deuteronomy is the source of the first reading for Mass  this weekend. Deuteronomy is from the Pentateuch, the collection of five  books that appears as a group at the beginning of the present versions of the  Bible.
The Pentateuch is special not because it is a grouping of several  books, but because these books together contain the law as given by God through  Moses.  
In this weekend’s reading, Moses submits the law to the people,  telling them that they must obey it when they enter their new land. They are  not to alter the law or pick or choose from among its pronouncements. If  the law carefully is followed, harmony and accord will follow. So will  security. The nation will survive.
Since God authors the law, nations observing the Hebrews will realize  the awesomeness of the Hebrews’ god.
The Epistle of St. James provides the second reading. James  occurs only rarely among the readings at Mass. The author of this epistle  is not known for certain, since various men with this name appear in the New  Testament.
Several would have had credentials in the early Church, James, the son  of Zebedee and brother of John; James, the son of Alphaeus, “the Less”; and  James, a kinsman of Jesus. The father of Judas Iscariot was also named James.  
Regardless, important in this reading is the revelation that God wills  us to live. God never wills death and disaster for us. In the broader  Christian context, as after all this is from the New Testament, this means  eternal life. Not only does God will that we live, but he has given us the  way to life in eternity that infinitely transcends our earthly life.
Also important is James’ reminder that, by serving orphans and widows,  we purify ourselves so that we can stand before God.
St. Mark’s Gospel supplies the last reading. Jesus frequently  debated the Pharisees and others familiar with the Law of Moses about  particulars in the law. Details and specifics often overtook the debate.
At times, people interpreted the Lord’s responses in these discussions  as demeaning, or even repudiating, the law of Moses. In reality, the words  of Jesus reaffirmed the law. He did not dismiss the law but rather went to  the kernel of the law. The essence of the law is wholeheartedly to love  God, and in this love to trust in and obey God.
These exchanges revealed the identity of Jesus. Moses was merely  the human instrument by which God spoke, so the Law of Moses actually was the  law of God. Jesus defined and applied the law because Jesus was God and  spoke as the lawgiver.
The Pharisees and other religious scholars of the time hardly  overlooked the fact that Jesus spoke and acted in the place of God. As  time unfolded, this identification with God by Jesus would lead to the  crucifixion.          
          
Reflection
                      The first reading contains a thought that humans invariably  dismiss. The thought simply is that, because of human limitations and  shortcomings, people often put themselves in unfortunate situations. They  can doom themselves. Unwilling to accept this fact, humans make excuses  and blame God for misfortunes.
            God truly and lovingly rescues people by drawing them from the  quicksand, but also by leading them away from the quicksand. He leads us  all away from the quicksand by giving us his law, the roadmap to life.
          Obeying God’s law  requires exact response. It requires action, not just good intentions,  attention to the needs of others, most especially the forgotten, dismissed and  scorned. It also calls for respect for and preservation of the  environment. This is the world day of prayer for the care of creation, an  obligation so emphasized by the Church.†