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Luke 20:27-38                                                    


WHO ARE THE SADDUCEES? --What do we know about the Sadducees? The Saddoukaioi (from the root, "Saddok,") refers to descendents of Zadok and were granted the privilege of officiating as priests in the Temple after the return from the Babylonian Captivity. They were well-to-do and influential collaborators with Rome. We also know that they were Hellenized Jews—Graecophiles, lovers of things Greek. [1]

People who hear this story read on Sunday will wonder about death and dying and what comes next. How might this text speak to our deepest questions about survival after death?

Jesus’ words on the nature of life after death are at once intriguing, reassuring, and disturbing. The question is as old and as timeless as the struggles of Job, who asked, "If mortals die, will they live again?" (Job 14:14 NRSV).

. . . Jesus’ words can thus be approached from a positive side. The God who created human life, including the institution of marriage, has also provided for life after death for those who have cultivated the capacity to respond to God’s love. The biblical teaching is that life comes from God. There is nothing in or of the human being that is naturally or inherently immortal. If there is life beyond death, it is God’s gift to those who have accepted God’s love and entered into relationship with God in this life; They "are children of God, being children of the resurrection" (20:36). [2]

 

connections

In Luke 20, the religious authorities ask Jesus three questions designed to trip him up or expose him; Jesus responds with twice as many questions and tells them a parable. Listen again to the three sets of questions and then ask yourself, "Do I respond to people’s problems with my answers or do I listen to them and ask them helpful questions?"

 

gambits

I think a homily that helps listeners to understand something about the religious group that approaches Jesus with the test question as well as explaining the implication of their question would fill in some blanks that might be missing in some of our stories.

The Sadducees come to Jesus not for pastoral or even theological advice, but with a stock answer for their position, yet couched in a seemingly innocent hypothetical story. Behind the story, however, Luke gives us enough clues so that the readers are not duped by their duplicity! We know that these guys are out to harangue, embarrass, and force Jesus into acknowledging the superiority of their position. Perhaps they want to split the audience. This is a "baiting Jesus" episode through the use of "what if," or "imagine with me," kind of approach.

Do you ever wonder how anyone could listen to this ridiculous story without wondering how a spouse could go through SEVEN partners?!!! I wonder how much arsenic the woman was injecting into the meatloaf. Suspicion would cause me to miss the whole point about resurrection; I would be in convolutions and conundrums until I could solve what I suspect to be a murder mystery of the first order.

Why would these well-to-doers find Jesus’ teaching on resurrection troubling or disdainful? Again deferring to higher authorities, Fitzmyer suggests that this caste of religious clerics might more resemble those who prefer a strict interpretation of the Torah vis-à-vis the oral law of the Pharisees. [3]

Share Jesus’ response and the hope of the good news that God is the God of Life and sees our lives and death from that perspective.

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[1] Josephus in Antiquities 13.10,6 par. 298, cited in Anchor Bible, page 1303.
[2] The New Interpreter’s Bible IX (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1995), pp. 389-390.
[3] Ibid., 1301.