Readings for Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Lent[1][2]
Readings from the Jerusalem Bible at Universalis
Commentary:
Reading 1 Dn 3:14-20, 91-92, 95
The story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego is recounted in the reading from the Book of Daniel. The three brothers are commanded to violate Mosaic Law by worshiping a graven image. Rather than perishing in the fire King Nebuchadnezzar had prepared for them, God sends an angle to intervene and the brothers are saved and the king is converted.
Responsorial Psalm Daniel 3:52, 53, 54, 55, 56
R. Glory and praise for ever!
The canticle of the three brothers is recounted in part in this passage. This is the song they sang as they waited in the white hot furnace.
Gospel Jn 8:31-42
In this passage from St. John’s Gospel Jesus continues his discourse with the Jews “who believed in him”. This statement is ironic since just a few verses later he says (v. 37) “But you are trying to kill me.” The point made here is that all are enslaved by sin and only Jesus, who is sent by the Father, can release us from that slavery. As much as the Jews argue that they have come from Abraham, Jesus pushes back and says if you came from Abraham your actions would make that clear, if you believe in God that also would be clear – something different must therefore be true.
Reflection:
We are given two contrasting pictures of humanity in today’s scripture and we see clearly God’s response. In the first reading we find Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego confronted with a horrible death by being burned alive in a furnace if they do not become apostate, reject their God and worship King Nebuchadnezzar’s golden idol.
They remain faithful and even though the men who cast them into the furnace are killed by the heat by just the act of throwing them in, they are unharmed. Not just unharmed, scripture tells us they are walking around on the white hot coals, in the company of a fourth who is apparently an angel (“…the fourth looks like a son of God.”). Their reward for faithfulness was salvation by divine intervention.
We then shift to Jesus, still embroiled in the discussion started earlier in St. John’s Gospel. It says he is speaking to Jews who believe in him but we note that later in the passage, on a couple of different occasions the Lord mentions they are trying to kill him – not something the “Jews who believe in him” would be doing.
St. John’s Gospel is full of ironic statements and there are a couple of good ones in this passage. But rather than getting focused on the language, let’s look at the message. The example of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego being saved because they were faithful in the face of death is taken to a new level in Christ who, being one with the Father, asks for that same belief in order to save us from an even worse fate.
When we take this message in the context of our Lenten journey, we see that scripture calls us to refine and sharpen our sense of who we are in Christ Jesus. He calls to us and tells us by example that if we believe in Him, our actions will demonstrate that fact. If we are truly people who believe in him, people will see us and how we love one another, and they will know.
We pray today that our actions will tell everyone who we are.
Pax
[1] After 04/07
[2] The image presented today is “The Three Young Men in the Blazing Furnace” by Pieter Pietersz, 1575
Readings from the Jerusalem Bible at Universalis
Commentary:
Reading 1 Dn 3:14-20, 91-92, 95
The story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego is recounted in the reading from the Book of Daniel. The three brothers are commanded to violate Mosaic Law by worshiping a graven image. Rather than perishing in the fire King Nebuchadnezzar had prepared for them, God sends an angle to intervene and the brothers are saved and the king is converted.
Responsorial Psalm Daniel 3:52, 53, 54, 55, 56
R. Glory and praise for ever!
The canticle of the three brothers is recounted in part in this passage. This is the song they sang as they waited in the white hot furnace.
Gospel Jn 8:31-42
In this passage from St. John’s Gospel Jesus continues his discourse with the Jews “who believed in him”. This statement is ironic since just a few verses later he says (v. 37) “But you are trying to kill me.” The point made here is that all are enslaved by sin and only Jesus, who is sent by the Father, can release us from that slavery. As much as the Jews argue that they have come from Abraham, Jesus pushes back and says if you came from Abraham your actions would make that clear, if you believe in God that also would be clear – something different must therefore be true.
Reflection:
We are given two contrasting pictures of humanity in today’s scripture and we see clearly God’s response. In the first reading we find Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego confronted with a horrible death by being burned alive in a furnace if they do not become apostate, reject their God and worship King Nebuchadnezzar’s golden idol.
They remain faithful and even though the men who cast them into the furnace are killed by the heat by just the act of throwing them in, they are unharmed. Not just unharmed, scripture tells us they are walking around on the white hot coals, in the company of a fourth who is apparently an angel (“…the fourth looks like a son of God.”). Their reward for faithfulness was salvation by divine intervention.
We then shift to Jesus, still embroiled in the discussion started earlier in St. John’s Gospel. It says he is speaking to Jews who believe in him but we note that later in the passage, on a couple of different occasions the Lord mentions they are trying to kill him – not something the “Jews who believe in him” would be doing.
St. John’s Gospel is full of ironic statements and there are a couple of good ones in this passage. But rather than getting focused on the language, let’s look at the message. The example of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego being saved because they were faithful in the face of death is taken to a new level in Christ who, being one with the Father, asks for that same belief in order to save us from an even worse fate.
When we take this message in the context of our Lenten journey, we see that scripture calls us to refine and sharpen our sense of who we are in Christ Jesus. He calls to us and tells us by example that if we believe in Him, our actions will demonstrate that fact. If we are truly people who believe in him, people will see us and how we love one another, and they will know.
We pray today that our actions will tell everyone who we are.
Pax
[1] After 04/07
[2] The image presented today is “The Three Young Men in the Blazing Furnace” by Pieter Pietersz, 1575
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