27th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C) - Luke 17: 5-10 - podcast episode cover

27th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C) - Luke 17: 5-10

Oct 01, 202214 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

To support the ministry and get access to exclusive content, go to: http://patreon.com/logicalbiblestudy


Luke 17: 5-10 - 'Say, 'We are merely servants.'


Catechism of the Catholic Church Paragraphs:

- 162 (In 'Perseverance in Faith) - Faith is an entirely free gift that God makes to man. We can lose this priceless gift, as St. Paul indicated to St. Timothy: “Wage the good warfare, holding faith and a good conscience. By rejecting conscience, certain persons have made shipwreck of their faith.” To live, grow, and persevere in the faith until the end we must nourish it with the word of God; we must beg the Lord to increase our faith; it must be “working through charity,” abounding in hope, and rooted in the faith of the Church.


Got a Bible question? Send an email to logicalbiblestudy@gmail.com, and it will be answered in an upcoming episode!

Transcript

Hi everyone, welcome again to the podcast. Today the reading you will hear at mass that we're going to dive into is one that you might not have heard before or perhaps you haven't. Haven't heard for a while. It's sort of in this part of Luke, that sometimes gets a bit, neglected. So we'll read today's reading and then we'll have a go at doing a verse by verse exegesis This over to try and help you understand what the author was trying to communicate to the original audience.

So Luke chapter 17 verses 5 to 10, The apostles said to the Lord, increase our faith, the Lord replied. Were your faith, the size of a mustard seed.

You could say to this mulberry, tree, be uprooted and planted in the sea and it would obey you Which of you with a servant plowing or minding sheep, would say to him when he returned from the fields come and have your meal immediately, would he not bought the more likely to say, get my supper laid, make yourself tidy and wait on me while I eat and drink. You can eat and drink yourself afterwards. Must he be grateful to the servant for doing what he was

told. So with you, when you have done all you have been told to do say, we are merely servants, we have done no more than our duty. So that's our reading for today, an interesting section here where Jesus is telling the apostles about the importance of doing their Duty as the leaders of the church. So we want to start by thinking about the context. So Jesus is moving From Galilee. He's getting closer to Day off for the Final Phase of his

ministry. And along the way, he's doing Ministry and speaking to the crowds. And he's just been speaking to the apostles in particular. So keep in mind, the audience here, he's speaking primarily to The Twelve Apostles. He's been speaking to them about how the need to treat other members of the church. Well, particularly he's been highlighting that they need to forgive other members of the church. And also, on the other hand, they need to avoid Scandal.

So those are things he's mentioned already. Now in verse 5, the Apostle said to the Lord increase our faith. So it looks like the apostles here are pretty amazed at what Jesus has just said, they're quite challenged by the high expectations is given them and the apostles. Now have this desire to have more faith in order to carry out his instructions. So that's actually a good thing that they want more faith. The Lord replied, were your faith, the size of a mustard seed.

Now, the Mustard Seed was the smallest known seed in that area of the world. So what Jesus is sort of saying here is even if you have the smallest possible Faith. So that's what he said. So far you could say to this mulberry tree or another translation, here is sicker mindtree. So this is quite a large tree, it had an extensive root system, so it was actually very hard to pull up. So the idea is you've got the smallest possible known seed, and then a very large tree.

That's very hard to pull out of the grout. Those are the two contrasts where your faith the size. Size of a mustard seed. You could say to this mulberry tree, be uprooted and planted in the sea and it would obey you. There's a few interesting things going on here, so there's no sea near where Jesus was speaking, so and also the sick of mine

trees don't grow in the sea. So when Jesus has this imagery of telling the cinnamon tree to be uprooted and planted in the sea, it's basically an impossible task. It's quite remarkable to imagine a sycamore tree growing in the sea. Supposed to be, he's giving them His image of something. That's basically impossible. It's a form of Hyperbole and it's actually one of Jesus

favorite sayings. Jesus often says, if he had Faith the size of a mustard seed, the point of it is it's about the power of Faith. Jesus has picked an example of something, which is amazing and impossible, and it's important to emphasize. Jesus doesn't literally mean that the apostles could command a tree to move. Having said that, we can't rule that out. It's possible that with the Power of the Holy Spirit. The apostles could do that but that's probably not primarily

what Jesus means. He's not saying that they could literally command a tree to move. His just setting up an example here, a kind of a hyperbole Jesus. Main point is that even a small amount of genuine faith will enable God to do great Miracles through them which would otherwise be impossible.

That's the point. He's showing them that they can do impossible things if they have genuine faith, So, Jesus responds to your could be interpreted to mean something like this, you already have enough Faith now, go and use it. So it's sort of a challenge to them or maybe he's hoping that his disciples will have true Faith. It's expressing Jesus, own desire, that his Apostles will develop that Faith. You could interpret it either way there, notice that Jesus is speaking to the apostles in

particular. Jesus teaching here appears to be that if the apostles as the church leaders have genuine faith There are no barriers to God, doing his work through them. So any Miracle will be possible. So it's particularly in the context of Jesus speaking to his future church leaders. He wants them to have complete faith in God, so that God is able to do work through them as leaders of the church. So we get to verse 7 now.

And Jesus is going to build on this in quite an interesting way, which of you with the servant plowing or minding sheep. So let's stop there. And think about what Jesus has said so far why has he brought Up servants on a farm. Well, it was pretty common in that cult. In this agricultural culture for them. To either live on farms or no

servants, who worked on farms. And if you did work on a farm, if you were a farm servant, there were certain things you would do. Now, these were paid servants, it's not the kind of slaves that you might think of. In 21st century. These are paid servants who work on the farm and they have certain tasks to do for the

people who own the farm. So, Jesus says, which of you with a servant plowing or minding sheep, So he sort of imagining that there they are the Masters, the apostles, and the Masters, who owned the farm, which of you would say to your servant when he returned from the fields come and have your meal immediately. Now, the whole point is, they wouldn't do that. You wouldn't say to your servant when he got back come and have your meal immediately. That's not how that Society worked verse 8.

Jesus says, would he not be more likely to say, get my supper laid? Make yourself tidy and wait on me while I eat and drink? You can eat and drink yourself. Afterwards now sounds a bit harsh, but that's actually how it worked in that culture. It wasn't considered to be harsh treatment of the servant. It was just that they knew their place in society when the servant came in from working. He would then put on his Butler's gear if you like, and

then wait on the master. Help repair the Masters food. Wait, till the master had finished eating before the servant himself? Got to, which, that was just the way things were done. Everyone's place in society, and in the home, it was very clear in that culture. Jesus is just saying, isn't this the way things work? That's his point. Now he uses in verse 8 he uses this phrase, make yourself tidy and what that basically means is good yourself. Make yourself ready.

So the image here would be of the servant putting on his way to his gear to help serve the master. Verse 9 must he be grateful for what he was doing for doing what he was told. We can translate that as does he? Thank the servant because he did what was commanded. Now this is a rhetorical question. The answer is no, the master does not. Not have to thank the servant for doing what he was told for doing what he was paid to do. That's not how the master. The servant Master relationship

worked. The master gave the servant instructions, the servant did what he was told, that's just how it works. So we're getting out a verse 10 where Jesus makes his point. He says, so with you or so, you also. So he's about to give them meaning he wants his disciples to take away. Now at this point, imagine he's speaking to the apostles, the apostles are probably thinking that in this kind of mini Parable, they The master rush but Jesus is going to turn it on

his head here. When you have done, all you have been told to do or you can translate that as all that is commanded of you. The reference here is to God's Commandments particularly the ones which Jesus has given to the apostles during his ministry all the way through. He's been telling his Apostles when you're the leaders of the church, you're going to need to do this and this. So notice he's treating them as the servants in the parable,

right? When you have been when you have done all, You have been told to do say, we are merely servants, we have done no more than our duty. That's Jesus instructions. Here he wants the apostles. When they've done all the been commanded to do his Apostles, they should simply say. We have done. No more than we have been told to do so, interesting teaching here, isn't it? We are merely servants or we can translate that as we are unworthy servants. We have only done what was our duty.

It's an interesting point and it appears to be Jesus teaching his Apostles that they should follow God's commands without complaint. And without a sense of entitlement, Soooo. He can sort of sense that they're starting to get this sense of entitlement of thinking, we're going to be the leaders of the church, everyone's going to serve us. It's going to be great. And we know particularly from the gospel of Matthew that they do start to think along these lines.

So Jesus is telling them what true service is they need to do. It's commanded off them as leaders of the church and what Jesus expects of them as Leaders, with our complaint. And without a sense of entitlement, they should not expect praise or reward from God for fulfilling his basic commands. So, Commanded to do things like spread, the message of the Kingdom Shepherd, God's people serve, God's people. Those are their commands, they shouldn't get a sense of entitlement.

They shouldn't expect that God is going to be in their debt for doing these things. So Jesus is kind of putting the apostles back in their place here, he's telling them, they need to be ready to serve others, not for others to serve them. You can look at it this way, the work of the Apostles is very important but it's not beyond the call of the Christian Duty and they should not expect they themselves. They can't fully repay God for the gifts that God has given to them.

So, in other words, he's teaching the apostles that you can't put God in your debt, so don't expect that to happen. The context here, might shed a bit of light on this because remember the Apostle's have just asked Jesus to give them a special Faith, they said, increase our faith. So maybe here Jesus might be trying to teach the apostles patience and perseverance. Maybe he's saying to them. They need to do their Duty as Apostles before.

They can have this great faith that they're looking for. So possibly, there's a connection between what has just

come before. This overall Jesus is telling his Apostles particularly and maybe his disciples all of his disciples by extension, his giving them a sobering teaching that they should not become proud of their status as disciples or consider themselves to be special in the The Eyes Of God for fulfilling his basic commands, rather their focus should be on serving other Christians, in order to truly serve God in the way that he wants them to.

So, it appears that Jesus is doing kind of, he's stopping them from getting a big ego for serving God. He doesn't want them to feel selfish or special because that they are may have certain roles of leadership in the church that appears to be what's going on here. He's saying, look in the end, really your servants. God has given you command. And Through Me, Jesus and your the expectation is that you will follow those without getting a big head. Remember that you are servants.

Now, we also need to balance this with other things, Jesus says, because as, you know, elsewhere in the gospels, Jesus does indicate the Christians who consistently work Faithfully for God will be rewarded in the next life. In fact, she's just been saying that in Luke chapter 16. So in this case I think we can say with a reasonable degree of

confidence. His Speaking to his Apostles particularly maybe his other leading disciples by extension his warning, them against getting proud in their role as God's leaders in the church. Hopefully, you find that exegesis somewhat helpful. It's an interesting text.

So if you want to hear the next section of text here that will be verses 11 through 219. You can hear that on Wednesday, if week, 32 in ordinary time or if you're listening to this on Sunday you'll probably hear it next Sunday as So let's finish today with just one catechism paragraph, which is from paragraph 162 which is about the necessity of persevering in faith. See if you can hear the echo of this passage here, faith is an entirely free gift that God

makes to man. We can lose this Priceless gift as Saint Paul indicator to Timothy wage. The good wolf are holding faith and a good conscience by rejecting conscience, certain person's have made shipwreck of their faith. To live grow and persevere in the faith until the end. We must nourish it with the word of God. We must beg the Lord to increase our faith. It must be working through charity, abounding in, Hope and rooted in the faith of the

church. So, here, the catechism, reminds us that if we want to stay in the faith, we need to pray. We need to beg the Lord. That's what the catechism says. We need to beg the Lord to increase our faith. That should be the constant prayer of Christians. Thanks for listening today, please keep telling. People about the ministry and we'll continue to look at the gospels in the coming days.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android