Cajun humorist Justin Wilson tells the story about two boys who were neighbors. They were best of friends every day of the week except Sunday. They were enemies on Sunday because one was a Catholic and the other was a Baptist.
Their parents did not like the fact that these religious differences were producing such uncongenial relations, so they agreed to have their sons visit each otherās church services so that a mutual understanding might foster a more tolerant attitude.
On the first Sunday, the Baptist boy visited the Catholic Church. Just before they sat down, the Catholic boy genuflected. āWhatās that mean?ā the Baptist asked. All through the mass, the Baptist boy wanted to know what this and that meant, and the little Catholic boy explained everything very nicely.
The next Sunday it was the Catholic boyās turn to visit the Baptist church. When they walked in the building, an usher handed them a printed bulletin. The little Catholic boy had never seen anything like that before in his whole life because his Catholic parish did not have bulletins. āWhatās that mean?ā he asked. His Baptist friend carefully explained. When the preacher stepped into the pulpit, he carefully opened his Bible, and conspicuously took off his watch and laid it on the pulpit. āWhatās that mean?ā the Catholic boy asked.
The Baptist boy said, āNot a darn thing!ā[1]
Whether we are Catholic or Protestant, we all have different traditions, some of them meaningful and some meaningless. Jesus addresses the issue of tradition in our Gospel lectionary reading for today from Mark 7:1-23ā¦.
Now when the Pharisees and some of the scribes who had come from Jerusalem gathered around him, they noticed that some of his disciples were eating with defiled hands, that is, without washing them. (For the Pharisees, and all the Jews, do not eat unless they thoroughly wash their hands, thus observing the tradition of the elders; and they do not eat anything from the market unless they wash it; and there are also many other traditions that they observe, the washing of cups, pots, and bronze kettles.) So the Pharisees and the scribes asked him, āWhy do your disciples not live according to the tradition of the elders, but eat with defiled hands?ā He said to them, āIsaiah prophesied rightly about you hypocrites, as it is written,
āThis people honors me with their lips,
but their hearts are far from me;
in vain do they worship me,
teaching human precepts as doctrines.ā
You abandon the commandment of God and hold to human tradition.ā
Then he said to them, āYou have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to keep your tradition! For Moses said, āHonor your father and your motherā; and, āWhoever speaks evil of father or mother must surely die.ā But you say that if anyone tells father or mother, āWhatever support you might have had from me is Corbanā (that is, an offering to God)āthen you no longer permit doing anything for a father or mother, thus making void the word of God through your tradition that you have handed on. And you do many things like this.āI believe this text raises a very important question: āWhich do we put first in our lives: Godās Word or human tradition?ā
The Pharisees and the scribes were coming from Jerusalem to check Jesus out, presumably to find something wrong with his ministry, probably because they felt threatened by him. Picking a fight, they asked, āWhy do your disciples not live according to the tradition of the elders, but eat with defiled hands?ā
Now, first century Jewish readers of this Gospel would have no need of an explanation about the tradition of the elders. The fact that Mark explains this suggests that he is writing primarily to Gentiles. The Pharisees had many oral traditions that they followed. Ever since the time of Ezra, after the Babylonian exile, certain teachers among the Jews had developed an elaborate oral tradition, supposedly to help Godās people apply the Torah, the Law, in their everyday lives. For example, it was not enough to know that God commanded his people to rest on the Sabbath. The teachers asked, āWell, what exactly constitutes work?ā Then they formulated their own answers to this. Picking up oneās mat and walking a certain distance could constitute work in the view of the oral tradition of the elders.
What the Pharisees focus on here is the tradition regarding hand washing. This tradition did not have to do with physical hygiene, but rather with ceremonial, ritual, cleanliness. Furthermore, as I have already suggested, this tradition of the elders was handed on orally for many years. It was not actually written down until long after the time of Jesus, but it was well known by all the Jews even if it was not written down.
William Barclay explains the ritual of hand washing this wayā¦.
Before every meal, and between each of the courses, the hands had to be washed, and they had to be washed in a certain way. The hands, to begin with, had to be free of any coating of sand or mortar or gravel or any such substance. The water for washing had to be kept in special large stone jars, so that it itself was clean in the ceremonial sense and so that it might be certain that it had been used for no other purpose, and that nothing had fallen into it or had been mixed with it. First, the hands were held with finger tips pointing upwards; water was poured over them and had to run at least down to the wrist; the minimum amount of water was one quarter of a log, which is equal to one and a half egg-shells full of water. While the hands were still wet each hand had to be cleansed with the fist of the other. That is what the phrase about using the fist means; the fist of one hand was rubbed into the palm and against the surface of the other. This meant that at this stage the hands were wet with water; but that water was now unclean because it had touched unclean hands. So, next, the hands had to be held with finger tips pointing downwards and water had to be poured over them in such a way that it began at the wrists and ran off at the finger tips. After all that had been done the hands were clean.So how did Jesus respond to the Pharisees on this point? First, he called them hypocrites. A hypocrite was a play-actor, a two-faced person. A hypocrite was one who wore a mask. He looked one way on the outside, but was really different behind the mask. Nathaniel Hawthorne once wrote, āNo man can for any considerable time wear one face to himself and another to the multitude without finally getting bewildered as to which is the true one.ā
To fail to do this was in Jewish eyes, not to be guilty of bad manners, not to be dirty in the health sense, but to be unclean in the sight of God. The man who ate with unclean hands was subject to the attacks of a demon called Shibta. To omit so to wash the hands was to become liable to poverty and destruction. Bread eaten with unclean hands was not better than excrement. A Rabbi who once omitted the ceremony was buried in excommunication. Another Rabbi, imprisoned by the Romans, used the water given to him for handwashing rather than for drinking and in the end nearly perished of thirst, because he was determined to observe the rules of cleanliness rather than satisfy his thirst.
That to the Pharisaic and Scribal Jew was religion. It was ritual, ceremonial, and regulations like that which they considered to be the essence of the service of God. Ethical religion was buried under a mass of taboos and rules.
Jesus quoted to the Pharisees from the prophet Isaiah, thus setting Godās word in Scripture above the human tradition of the Pharisees:
āThis people honors me with their lips,
but their hearts are far from me;
in vain do they worship me,
teaching human precepts as doctrines.ā
Jesus summed up his whole message to the Pharisees by saying: āYou abandon the commandment of God and hold to human tradition.ā
Just to drive his point home, Jesus gave another example of how the Pharisees set human tradition over Godās Word. Jesus mentions the word, āCorban,ā which means something offered to God. According to the tradition of the elders, the moment the word āCorbanā was pronounced over something, it was dedicated to God and could not be used for any other purpose.
Now, saying that something is dedicated to God seems like a good thing. However, some people were using this tradition of the elders very cleverly to get out of their obligations to others. Jesus uses the example of the person who says āCorbanā over his financial resources in order to get out of having to help his father and mother. To Jesusā mind, this was simply wrong. Love of God could not be opposed to love of other human beings. The two go together. Again, the problem of the Pharisees was that they were putting their human tradition before the Word of God; they were allowing human ideas to dictate their course in life, rather than allowing God to guide them.
Of course, this was not a problem simply for the Pharisees. It has been a perennial problem in religious circles. It was because of this, the setting of human tradition over Godās Word, that the Reformation took place. However, the battle between human tradition and Godās Word is not simply a problem for Catholics; it has been a problem for Protestants as well. Have not Protestants had their human traditions that have little or no foundation in the Word of God? Think about the fundamentalist who says, āI donāt smoke and I donāt chew, and I donāt go with girls who do!ā Think of the Presbyterian tradition in the Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms. The Puritans became the Pharisees of the 17th century. It was not enough for them to say that God wants us to keep the Sabbath. They believed they needed to spell things out further. Thus, Presbyterians have, at times, been caught in legalism from the 17th century down to today.
Terry Fullam tells this story about traditionā¦.
Iām thinking of a small-town church in upstate New York. Theyād had a rector in that church for over thirty-five years. He was loved by the church and the community. After he retired, he was replaced by a young priest. It was his first church; he had a great desire to do well. He had been at the church several weeks when he began to perceive that the people were upset at him. He was troubled.
Eventually he called aside one of the lay leaders of the church and said, āI donāt know whatās wrong, but I have a feeling that thereās something wrong.ā
The man said, āWell, Father, thatās true. I hate to say it, but itās the way you do the Communion service.ā
āThe way I do the Communion service? What do you mean?ā
āWell, itās not so much what you do as what you leave out.ā
āI donāt think I leave out anything from the Communion service.ā
āOh yes, you do. Just before our previous rector administered the chalice and wine to the people, heād always go over and touch the radiator. And, then, he would...ā
āTouch the radiator? I never heard of that liturgical tradition.ā
So the younger man called the former rector. He said, āI havenāt even been here a month, and Iām in trouble.ā
āIn trouble? Why?ā
āWell, itās something to do with touching the radiator. Could that be possible? Did you do that?ā
āOh yes, I did. Always before I administered the chalice to the people, I touched the radiator to discharge the static electricity so I wouldnāt shock them.ā
For over thirty-five years, the untutored people of his congregation had thought that was a part of the holy tradition. I have to tell you that church has now gained the name, āThe Church of the Holy Radiator.ā
Thatās a ludicrous example, but often itās nothing more profound than that. Traditions get started, and people endure traditions for a long time. They mix it up with practical obedience to the living God.[2]
I wonder, which is more important to us: human tradition or the word of God? Furthermore, what do we need to do to put God back in the driverās seat of our lives?
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