Day 39 “Lord of the Sabbath”

Disciples Pluck Grain on the Sabbath
Matthew 12:1-8; Mark 2:23-28; Luke 6:1-5

Summary
As Jesus passed grain fields with his disciples one Sabbath, they picked heads of grain to eat. The Pharisees protested this supposedly unlawful act, but Jesus upheld caring for human need over strict sabbatical legalism. Just as David had received consecrated bread in his time of need, so Jesus as Lord of the Sabbath permits meeting essential needs.

From this event we see today’s devotional:

Lord of the Sabbath

Imagine the sun warming your back as you stroll through fields heavy with ripened wheat. The air hums with the whisper of the wind, and the golden stalks move in a sun-soaked ballet. This is the scene that unfolds in the Gospels (Matthew 12:1-8, Mark 2:23-28, Luke 6:1-5) as Jesus and his disciples travel a path less traveled well, at least on a Sabbath day.

But amidst the tranquility, tension crackles. Hunger pangs gnaw at the disciples, and they reach for the readily available grain. Observing this, the Pharisees, guardians of religious law, pounce with accusatory whispers: “Look! Your disciples are doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath.”

Jesus, ever the gentle yet profound teacher, uses this encounter to illuminate a deeper truth. It is true that the law forbade working on the Sabbath day, but Jesus is Lord of the Sabbath and he has the right to make an exception that mere man could not make.

He reminds them of David, a man revered for his piety, who, driven by necessity, partook of the sacred bread reserved for priests.

His response echoes a timeless message: the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. God’s laws, like the Sabbath, were instituted not to burden us, but to guide us towards wholeness and well-being. The Lord of the Sabbath has the right to make it good for the hungry disciples to eat.

In that moment, he lays claim to an authority that transcends earthly rules. He is not bound by them, for he is their author, the embodiment of love and compassion that lies at the heart of the Law.

In this story Jesus, focused on need and not just the rules. The Pharisees, bound by their rigid interpretation, failed to understand that Jesus, as Son of God, could move in compassion.

Reading this give me great joy, because it shows me that I will not stand before a God who is filled only with Justice, but rather before a God who shows mercy. He know that we have feet of clay and he loves and provides for us.