Again, you
have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘Do not break your oath,
but fulfill to the Lord the vows you have made.’ But I tell you, do not swear
an oath at all: either by heaven, for it is God’s throne; or by the earth, for
it is his footstool; or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the Great King. And
do not swear by your head, for you cannot make even one hair white or black.
All you need to say is simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’; anything beyond this comes from
the evil one.
Matthew 5: 33-37
Reflection – (I
am away at the Nazareth family camp this week, but left the blog on automatic
post-pilot. Comments are moderated, as I am not around to check them.)
We’re going
through the Sermon on the Mount, bit by bit, to bask in the light of faith it
sheds on our lives in this Year of Faith, and to illuminate any dark corners of
our being that may not quite be in that faith just yet.
This little
passage is a somewhat obscure light, it seems to me. Most of us are not raised
in a culture where oath-taking is a major component of civil life. Signed
contracts are the fundamental unit of binding social obligation in our modern
world, not sworn oaths.
In the ancient
world, it was not thus. And oaths sworn on this sacred thing or that were the
norm of social congress and cohesion in that world. So what is Jesus meaning,
by saying it is from the evil one?
I don’t claim
to have the final word on this or any other Gospel passage, but it seems to me
that so much of Jesus’ teachings are about integrity of heart, about the
interiority of the human person, about being truly righteous inside and out.
Oaths needed to be sworn by sacred objects and entities because the human
person, taken in and as a person, was insufficiently trustworthy.
In other
words, you and I are not sacred
objects or entities, and need these extra boost of oath-taking to be trusted.
And this is what Jesus is pushing us to surmount. If I am a child of the
kingdom, then my simple ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ should be sufficient. The Lord is calling
us to enter more deeply into our divine dignity, our status as sons and
daughters of God in Him.
We live,
meanwhile, in a world of deceit, spin, subterfuge, manipulation, and (to put it
bluntly) b.s. The taking of sacred oaths has largely passed away from our
social contract, but the call to deep integrity, deep honesty, and deep
trustworthiness is no less urgent and relevant in our world. To say what we
mean and mean what we say, to be simple men and women of the ‘yes and the no’,
to eschew all forms of spin doctoring and manipulation and propaganda—this is
serious Gospel business in our world today.
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