11th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year A

The Lectionary and Scripture Interpretation for Ordinary Time

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Today’s Readings

Today we see God choosing people – not because they are somehow “better” or more holy. The Jews were weak and vulnerable; a tiny nation in the midst of powerful foes. The disciples were a motley crew who abandoned Jesus at the critical juncture. God does not choose us because we measure up. God chooses us because he made each of us to uniquely fit into his plan. We have something special to bring to the table that God has gifted us alone to do. He chooses us to do the work of the kingdom. This is what makes us special. 

But Paul reminds us that it is not this giftedness that buys our justification or right standing with God. Only God can make that happen. God creates. God chooses. God calls. God brings into right relationship. 

A final lesson from these readings is that we are gifted and called in order to give. We are Christ’s presence in the world, sent to build the kingdom.

Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14B-16A

In this passage we’re called to remember the past in order to act in a certain way in the future. You see this a lot in the Psalms – remembering what God has done and proceeding in confidence that God will continue to work that way in the future. 

Today we remember the Exodus event, in particular the way in which God miraculously feeds his people in the desert which you can read in Exodus 16. 

The whole book of Deuteronomy is basically a retelling of the Law and all the key stories. The Israelites are standing on the brink of finally entering the promised land and this is Moses’ grand farewell speech. So he reminds them of everything God had done with the intention of having them rest firm in the knowledge that God will continue to be with them. 

Verse 3 reminds the Israelites of their desert trials. God let them be afflicted, to know hunger, and then he satisfied that hunger. And all this had a purpose: to know we do not live by bread alone. He calls it “food unknown to you.” The word manna comes from the Hebrew “man hu” which means “what is it?!”

Verses 4-13 talk about many other ways that God provided for them in the desert. 

Sometimes we have to stop and remember all that God has done for us and then proceed in confidence that God will continue to work that way in the future. 

What can you call to mind right now to remember that God has cared for you in the past? How can then allow you to proceed in confidence that God will continue to work that way in the future?

Matthew 9:36—10:8

During Ordinary Time, I’ll cover the Old Testament and then the Gospel readings as a pair so that we can better see the connections. 

The gospel of Matthew has a well-defined narrative structure. You can see by the color bands above that each section has a corresponding section. For example, chapters 1-4 are Jesus’ birth and beginnings which correspond to chapters 26-29 on his death and rebirth.

Chapters 8-9 demonstrate Jesus’ authority through healing and teaching. He also calms the sea during a storm, calls Matthew the tax collector, and engages with the Pharisees. Today’s passage is a hinge between that section and the next section where he will teach about his mission.

At the beginning of this chapter in verse 1 it says “Then he summoned his twelve disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits to drive them out and to cure every disease and every illness.”
Verses 2-4 give a list of the disciples
Verses 5-15 are instructions for the mission
Verses 16-25 are a warning that they will encounter persecution on the mission

Interestingly, we never hear about the end of this mission in Matthew. This could be a way of suggesting that the mission is open-ended and continuing.

In Matthew, Jesus appears to restrict his entire mission to the Jews. The few Gentiles to which he ministers come to him. And yet, Matthew’s detailed genealogy does not attempt to hide Jesus’ Gentile blood. Matthew’s community was perhaps in the midst of the struggle with the question: are we Jews or something else? Matthew must always balance these things and he seems to lean in the direction of embracing Jewish identity.

There is a sense of urgency here. For the original audience, Jesus evokes the harvest which must be gathered in a timely manner – there was much work to do. The harvest was also a metaphor for the end of time – God’s final judgment. 

Verse 36 says that Jesus’ heart was “moved with pity.” The Greek has a wonderful word – splagchnizomai from splanxna, ‘the inward parts,’ especially the nobler entrails – the heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys. This word expresses a profound emotion and agitation in the innermost part of the body. It was not simply pity but rather an embodied expression of solidarity with the people.

What situations in your own life have  moved God to feel such deep compassion for you? Are there situations that move you to feel such compassion for others?

In what practical ways can you make the proclamation that the kingdom of heaven is at hand?

Old Testament / Gospel Connection

How are the Old Testament and Gospel readings connected? Each week I will offer my views on this but I encourage you to first read the passages and look for your own connections!

In Exodus God reminds the people who and whose they are and what they will become. Centuries (millennia?) later, Jesus looks over the people who were heirs to this great legacy and his heart is moved with compassion. There is still much work to be done. So he sends out his disciples on what is basically the same mission: remember what you have freely received from God and now go out and give it just as freely.

Romans 5:6-11

The book of Romans has affected the later development of Christian theology more than any other New Testament book. No other book has been so commented and debated on. 

Written around 57-58AD probably in Corinth. Paul’s mission in the eastern Mediterranean area was over and he was looking forward to evangelizing Spain. This is the only surviving letter that Paul wrote to a community that was unknown to him. It was a letter of introduction. If you think about Paul’s career… he didn’t have exactly a pristine record. In Jerusalem he persecuted Christians. He got into a huge debate with the apostles about the need to retain Jewish ways. He won the argument but it probably didn’t make him popular. Now he’s off to Rome and he’d like the Christian community there to help him make the journey to Spain. And so he wants to put himself in a good light and he wants to show them that he is doctrinally sound.

Romans is not a compendium of Christian doctrine nor is it Paul’s last will and testament. Romans is a letter to try and make Paul look good to an unknown group of people.

The audience in Rome is debated. Most of the book seems written to Gentiles but there are some chapters that are obviously written to Jews.

Romans chps 1-8 say that God has already acted faithfully to include Gentiles in the community of salvation. Chapters 1-4 make that case to a Jewish audience while chapters 5-8 speak the message to a Gentile audience. 5:1-11 set the theme for chapters 5-8: those who are justified by faith in Christ are reconciled to God and will share in Christ’s risen life.

Verse 6 says that there was an “appointed time” when Christ died. This is chairos time. While it was indeed a moment in history, Paul is speaking in this passage about a flow of events outside chronology as we know it. In chronos time, things happen sequentially in order. In kairos time, everything “is” all the time.

Verse 7 is a rhetorical argument by which Paul is attempting to show the completely gratuitous nature of what Jesus did for us. It sounds confusing and some scholars think perhaps the scribe wrote out what Paul dictated and then later Paul or someone else tried correct or clarify the manuscript. It might be less confusing to say “It’s hard enough to die for a good person but to die for someone who’s not good is unthinkable.”

Verse 8 speaks a message to those times when we are tempted to think we must earn God’s love or do something to make God love us. There is no quid pro quo here, nothing that says God’s loving actions are dependent on anything we do.

Verses 9-10 use a variety of words to describe our condition in God: “we are justified, saved, reconciled.” All are similar verbs but each has a slightly different perspective on what God does for us: The verb justified is relational: because of what God does, we are put into right relationship with God. Saved means delivered from peril. Paul uses another verb elsewhere to talk about deliverance from the perils of life. This verb indicates deliverance from the ultimate peril of death. Reconcile means to change or exchange and it indicates the transformation that takes place in our relationship: we have been changed from enemies into friends.

In what ways have you tried to earn God’s love and approval? How can you take Paul’s message to heart and accept the love God is already giving?

Questions to ponder

What do these readings say about how to live day in and day out as Christians? 

What experiences can you recall and name as God working in your life and the world?

In what ways do you uniquely mediate the presence of God in the world?

What situations in your own life have  moved God to feel such deep compassion for you? Are there situations that move you to feel such compassion for others?

In what practical ways can you make the proclamation that the kingdom of heaven is at hand?

In what ways have you tried to earn God’s love and approval? How can you take Paul’s message to heart and accept the love God is already giving?

Scripture texts in this work are taken from the New American Bible, revised edition © 2010, 1991, 1986, 1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Washington, D.C. and are used by permission of the copyright owner. All Rights Reserved. No part of the New American Bible may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the copyright owner.

© 2023 Kelly Sollinger