Well, I decided to add another Ignatian Meditation. This is the last one of last week's gospel. Part of the reason I am sharing is to encourage you to stay with one passage for a week and go back to it over and over. Meditation brings out the richness of the text.
One more point, Christ purposefully referred to the Prophet Isaiah when talking to the scribes and Pharisees.
Here is the reference: Isaiah 29:13 The Lord says: "These people come near to me with their mouth and honour me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Their worship of me is made up only of rules taught by men.
Christ chooses this passage not only because it refers to hypocrisy, but because it is Isaiah who states it.
Isaiah is the great prophet of the Messiah. He is the prophet who over and over again identifies the characteristics of the Chosen One, the Christ. The Pharisees and scribes would have recognized the use
of Isaiah immediately as not only a rebuke, but "the" reference to Messianic claims.
Only two that we know of went home and thought on these things: SS. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus.
The Catholic Encyclopaedia states this on Joseph: I leave the links in for your perusal.
All that is known for certain concerning him is derived from the canonical Gospels. He was born at Arimathea — hence his surname — "a city of Judea" (Luke 23:51), which is very likely identical with Ramatha, the birthplace of the Prophet Samuel, although several scholars prefer to identify it with the town of Ramleh. He was a wealthy Israelite (Matthew 27:57), "a good and a just man" (Luke 23:50), "who was also himself looking for the kingdom of God" (Mark 15:43). He is also called by St. Mark and by St. Luke a bouleutes, literally, "a senator", whereby is meant a member of the Sanhedrin or supreme council of the Jews. He was a disciple of Jesus, probably ever since Christ's first preaching in Judea (John 2:23), but he did not declare himself as such "for fear of the Jews" (John 19:38). On account of this secret allegiance to Jesus, he did not consent to His condemnation by the Sanhedrin (Luke 23:51), and was most likely absent from the meeting which sentenced Jesus to death (cf. Mark 14:64).
The Crucifixion of the Master quickened Joseph's faith and love, and suggested to him that he should provide for Christ's burialbefore the Sabbath began. Unmindful therefore of all personal danger, a danger which was indeed considerable under the circumstances, he boldly requested from Pilate the Body of Jesus, and was successful in his request (Mark 15:43-45). Once in possession of this sacred treasure, he — together with Nicodemus, whom his courage had likewise emboldened, and who brought abundant spices — wrapped up Christ's Body in fine linen and grave bands, laid it in his own tomb, new and yet unused, and hewn out of a rock in a neighbouring garden, and withdrew after rolling a great stone to the opening of the sepulchre (Matthew 27:59, 60; Mark 15:46; Luke 23:53; John 19:38-42). Thus was fulfilled Isaiah's prediction that the grave of the Messias would be with a rich man (Isaiah 53:9). The Greek Church celebrates the feast of Joseph of Arimathea on 31 July, and the Roman Churchon 17 March. The additional details which are found concerning him in the apocryphal "Acta Pilati", are unworthy of credence. Likewise fabulous is the legend which tells of his coming to Gaul A.D. 63, and thence to Great Britain, where he is supposed to have founded the earliest Christian oratory at Glastonbury. Finally, the story of the translation of the body of Joseph of Arimathea from Jerusalem to Moyenmonstre (Diocese of Toul) originated late and is unreliable.
The CE states this on Nicodemus: The name is of Greek origin, but at that epoch such names were occasionally borrowed by the Jews, and according to Josephus (Ant. of the Jews, XIV, iii, 2)Nicodemus was the name
of one of the ambassadors sent by Aristobulus to Pompey. A Hebrew form of the name (Naqdimon) is
found in the Talmud. Nicodemus
was a Pharisee, and in
his capacity of sanhedrist, (John 7:50) was a leader of the Jews. Christ, in the interview
when Nicodemus came to him by night, calls him a master in Israel. Judging from John 19:39, Nicodemus must have been
a man of means, and it is probable that he wielded a certain influence in
the Sanhedrim. Some writers conjecture from his question: "How can a
man be born when he is old?", that he was already advanced in years, but
the words are too general to warrant such a conclusion. He appears in this
interview as a learned and intelligent believer, but timid and not
easily initiated into the mysteries of the new faith. He next appears (John 7:50-51) in
the Sanhedrim offering a word in defence of the accused Galilean; and we may infer from this
passage that he embraced the truth as soon as it was fully made
known to him. He is mentioned finally in John 19:39, where he is shown co-operating
with Joseph of Arimathea in
the embalming and burial of Jesus. His name occurs later in some of
the apocryphal writings,
e.g. in the so-called "Acta Pilati",
a heterogeneous document which in the sixteen century was published under the
title "Evangelium
Nicodemi" (Gospel of Nicodemus).
The time of his death is unknown. The Roman Martyrology commemorates the
finding of his relics, together
with those of Sts. Stephen, Gamaliel, and Abibo, on 3 August
The CE states this on Nicodemus: The name is of Greek origin, but at that epoch such names were occasionally borrowed by the Jews, and according to Josephus (