(Homily 2nd Sunday in
Ordinary Time, Yr. C)
At the heart of God’s relationship with
his people is a covenant. God in his unfathomable kindness enters into a
relationship of love with his people. In the Old Testament Yahweh established a
covenant with the chosen people, the Israelites. We cannot but remember God’s
words to Moses, “I shall take you as my people and I shall be your God. And you
will know that I am Yahweh your God, who have freed you from the forced labour
of the Egyptians” (Ex. 6:7). Indeed,
the history of man’s salvation is a
history of a covenant of Love. In the New Testament, in and through Jesus
Christ a New covenant is established between God and his people, and this Covenant
was enacted with the blood of Jesus, in fact the synoptic Gospels captured it
vividly well thus: “This is the blood of the covenant which will be shed…” (Mt. 26:28; Mk. 14:24; Lk. 22:20).
Drawing the issue further, as envisaged in the first reading, this covenant
between God and his people is sometimes presented with the nuptial imagery,
however, in the Gospel passage Jesus deepened the significance of this covenant
of love in the context of a Wedding feast, through the imagery of water and
wine. As such, one of the connecting
factors of the first reading and the Gospel is the nuptial theme, but the
nuptial theme is not central in the Gospel passage, it is only considered from
the point of view of the setting or the context in which the miracle (the
central theme) took place. However, in the first reading we see the
interpretative key to the miraculous event of the Gospel. What Isaiah
prophesied about came realized in Jesus. For Jesus is the Marriage of heaven
and earth, a marriage between divinity and humanity. Furthermore, this marriage
is equally linked to the Eucharist, because the changing of water into wine auspicates
the Eucharist, therein we see a progression in Jesus’ miracle, from changing
water to wine, he will later change wine to his Blood. No doubt, the Eucharist
in a certain sense, could be considered as the marriage of Christ and his
Church, and this will make the nuptial theme of the first reading overlap into
the theme of the Gospel periscope. Jesus indeed is the marriage of heaven and
earth.
The first reading (Is. 62:1-5) comes from the part of Trito-Isaiah which consists of
songs that celebrate the return of the Israelites from exile. Isaiah presents the situation of the
Israelites with the promise of a divine intervention. The overriding theme
of this song is the restoration of the city of Jerusalem. As a result, God
rejoices over the city, and the prophet uses the image of a bridegroom that
rejoices over his bride to describe this. “No more will you be known as
‘Forsaken’ or your country be known as ‘Desolation’; instead, you will be
called ‘My Delight is in her’ and your country ‘The Wedded’; for Yahweh will
take delight in you and your country will have its wedding. Like a young man
marrying a virgin, your rebuilder will wed you, and as the bridegroom rejoices
in his bride, so will your God rejoice in you” (vv.4-5). This is God speaking to his people, the Creator of the
universe, the Rebuilder, wants to enter into an intimate and life-giving
relationship with his creatures, even with our human imperfections, flaws and
frailties. Jerusalem is compared to a
Spouse that is “forsaken”, because she is unfaithful to her spouse (the Lord).
Despite all odds God continues to show love to her (humanity).
Owing to its content, this reading is
appropriate for any festival season, and as such, the choice of this reading
could have been the intention to match the first reading with the Gospel, the
marriage feast at Cana in Galilee. For the prophet used nuptial imagery to
delineate the relationship between God and Israel. In all, the prophet makes
three considerations about the restoration of Jerusalem: ●She will be a crown
and a diadem in the hand of the Yahweh. ●The city will be given a new name, “My
delight in her”. ●The nuptial imagery, “Yahweh will rejoice over Jerusalem as a
bride”. Christ realizes fully this
prophecy: He is the real Bridegroom; in him God established a more profound
union with humanity and his love for humanity assumed a supreme expression.
The nuptial theme in the prophecy of Isaiah to a certain extent situates us
well into the context of the episode of Cana, as narrated by St. John in the
Gospel. Christ realizes fully this prophecy of Isaiah.
In
the passage of today’s Gospel (Jn. 2:1-12)
what prophet Isaiah longed for happened, the Bridegroom came and laid out a
great banquet of finest wine (cf. Is.
25:6). Here, we see the realization of what Isaiah envisaged in the first
reading, and this helps us in no small way to understand while the first
miracle of Jesus took place in the context of a Wedding. Jesus is the
Bridegroom and the Church is the Bride. This first sign of Jesus is a thought
provoking one especially in our world today, providing more wine, more alcohol
appears mundane, but the significance of this sign surpasses this simplistic
interpretation. St. John narrated only seven miracles of Jesus in his Gospel,
and he called them “signs” because he considered them as a means of the
revelation of the glory of Christ. This passage serves as the continuation of the glorious manifestation of Jesus,
“He manifested his glory and the disciples believed in Him” (Jn. 2:11); and then the featuring of Mary as the Advocate of
all men at all times. John’s account of the episode of the wedding at Cana
is replete with wonderful messages that leave us in an admiration of this
sublime gesture of Jesus to the couple, who were about to find themselves in an
embarrassing situation, of running out of wine on their wedding day. However,
the most striking part of all is the first miracle of Jesus: changing water
into wine. This is an extraordinary
event with which Jesus started his series of miracles. An interesting
factor in the narrative was the report of our Evangelist John at the beginning
of today’s Gospel, that Jesus was invited for the Wedding; he did not just go
on His own. “Two days later, there was a wedding in the town of Cana in
Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there, and Jesus and His disciples had also been
invited to the Wedding” (Jn. 2:1-2).
The invitation of Jesus to the Wedding feast occasioned the possibility of the
miracle. The placement of Mary first in
the context of the Wedding could presuppose that one of the couples was related
to Mary or that Mary was there to witness this first outing of her Son after
his Baptism. In all, whatever that necessitated her presence in that feast
made her presence a providential one. Little wonder, she is adorned with the
titles Mother of Divine providence, Mediatrix of all graces etc.!
As
recounted by the St. John, at the prime of the feast, their “wine finished”. It
must have been a great embarrassment for the wedding couple. In the bible, “wine” is the symbol of happy
love between a man and a woman, between man and God. The lack of wine can
symbolize, lack of joy, happiness in one’s life. The psalmist says that “wine
gladdens the heart of man” (Ps. 103:15).
It can also stand for when we are in a state of need (because something
essential is lacking). As a matter of fact, in every Jewish feast the absence
of wine is unimaginable. In the Old Testament, sometimes wine is the symbol of
God’s blessing. For instance in the book of Hosea, when the Israelites
abandoned God, God denied them of His blessing, “Since she has not known that
it was I who gave her the grain, the wine and the oil…which they used for Baal.
Therefore, I will take back my grain in its time and my wine in its season…” (Hos. 2:10-11). Here, God declared that
he will deprive the people of wine, when they abandoned Him, but in the New Testament, in and with Jesus we
see the new Wine (New and Superabundant Blessing). Now Jesus is the true Vine
(cf. Jn. 15:1) that continues to
gladden our heart.
Be that as it may, the providential
intervention of Mary, to spare the couple of public shame is really an act of
graciousness. She is a woman that is
attentive to whoever and whatever that is around her. She noticed what was
going to happen; Mary turned to Jesus and said: “They have no wine” (Jn. 2:3). The striking point of the
episode is Jesus’ response to Mary, “woman, why turn to me?” “My hour has not
yet come” (Jn. 2:4). Interestingly,
Mary’s response to Jesus was her invitation to the servants “do whatever He
tells you” (Jn. 2:5). This reveals
Mary’s special trust in the Word of God. She is our model and our advocate. She
is still our intercessor especially when our own wine finishes. Our own wine
could be symbolic of anything that gladdens our heart, that gives meaning to
our life (job, life partner, good health, breakthrough etc.). She indicated the way: “Whatever he
asks you do it”. This invitation of Mary
remains till today the pivot of the human reception of the Good News. She
invited the servants to readiness and openness to the words of Jesus. She is
equally inviting you today to listen to what the Word says, He continues to
speak…
Therein, Jesus called her “woman” which
could be mistaken to be disrespect for his mother. But this is not the only
time Jesus is addressing Mary with the appellative “woman”. In John 19:26, while Jesus was on the cross he
said “woman behold your Son”, and to John, “behold your mother” (Jn. 19:27). Certainly, the miracle of Cana came about because
“they did whatever he told them”. Mary reminds us that the Word of God is
words and actions intimately related. His Word produces effects and
transformation. Therefore, she invites
us today to allow the Word we receive to model our life and our responses to
every human situation we may encounter every day. It is by doing exactly as
she advised that the empty jars where filled up again. If we hearken to her words, the empty jars of our life will be filled
again. Not only at Cana, but Mary continues to intercede for us and plead on
our behalf even today.
Upon consideration of the test and the language
of the evangelist therein, it is evident that the passage is full of dense and
profound meanings, and it is upon that backdrop we would like to make few
observations: First, it is interesting that the first miracle of Jesus takes
place in an occasion of a wedding feast.
This human fact assumes an elevated symbolical significance, that is, it
expresses the union of love between Christ and humanity, as the Son of God, and
through the incarnation he has united himself for love, in the most profound
way with humanity. Second, is about the response of Jesus to Mary, his
mother: “what have I to do with you woman? My hour has not yet come” (v.4).
The response of Jesus may sound as a disapproval and refusal of the request of
the mother, but far be it. In fact, Mary immediately ordered the servants: “Do
whatever he tells you” (v.5). But
for St. John, the ‘hour’ that Jesus was
referring to was the ‘hour’ of his Cross, that is the hour when his glory will
be manifested, the hour of his exaltation. Jesus told his mother that this
hour has not come; however, he listened to the desires of the mother. All his
life and existence were propended towards the ‘hour’, the hour of the Cross, where he would celebrate the real wedding
of love and offer to the world the true and authentic messianic banquet: His
Body and Blood for the salvation of all. Third, revolves around the fact
that the miracle performed by Jesus does not consist only in the changing of
water to wine, but also in the abundance
and the quality of this wine, that
is better than the one offered initially at the wedding feast. However, taking
it to its Christological implication, his
blood is the New Wine of the New Covenant! In the image of the nuptial banquet, we can see a prefiguration of the
Eucharistic Banquet. At the Wedding feast water was changed to wine, here
wine is changed into the blood of Christ. Above all, in the parlance of the
evangelist, the reality of the miracle of changing water to wine has a further
symbolic significance pointing toward the event of Jesus at Golgotha. By means of what He accomplishes on the
Cross, the old order will give way to a new order. Indeed, there is more to
the miraculous change of water to wine than we can imagine.
In the second reading (1Cor. 12:4-11) St. Paul specifies the varieties of gifts from the
Holy Spirit. In verses 4-6 we see a
triadic structure: charismata: (in
connection to the Spirit); diakonia:
service (in connection to the Lord, Christ); energemata: workings, functions (in connection to God). The apostle maintained that the gifts are
gifts of grace (charis) gratia gratis data and they are given for the benefit of
the community, as such, it is not an endowment to be proud of. For “the
particular manifestation of the Spirit granted to each one is to be used for
the general good” (v. 7). Indeed, in a wider lens the gestures of Mary and
Jesus in the Gospel passage could be seen as a concrete way of putting our
gift(s) at the benefit of others. Mary intervened and interceded at the
imminent lack of wine, with her gift of intercession, and Jesus as the Messiah
used his gift of miracles to provide a new wine. How often do you use your
gifts to uplift others?
Above all, the message of the Gospel is
indeed a striking reminder to all of us that when and if we bring what we have
and give it to Jesus He will multiply it and perfect it. He turns what seemed
to be embarrassment to a manifestation of God’s glory. Drawing the issue
further, our problem today just as it has been from the beginning, is that we
do not do what he says. This human unfaithfulness began with Adam and Eve at
the Garden of Eden: “God said, You must not eat it, nor touch it… Because you
have done this…” (Gen. 3:3, 14).
Contrarily, today Mary is inviting us to overcome this human tendency and then
do what He tells us, remember: “Today, if you hear his voice harden not your
hearts” (Ps. 95:7-8; cf Heb. 3:15). Beloved
friends in Christ as we admire the wonderful intervention of God in the first
reading, the power of Mary’s advocacy and the wondrous gesture of Jesus in the
Gospel passage, St. Paul invites us directly or indirectly to imbibe the value
of imitation, therefore to make effort to use the gifts of grace and of nature
God has lavished on us for the benefit of others. May Mary, the woman that sees
with both the heart and the eyes continue to intercede for us! May she in her
foresightedness alert Jesus of our needs!! Amen!!!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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