Christ before the Sabbath and the restoration of the legal order in its beginning and end.
By Óscar Méndez Oceguera
The Gospel recounts events that should be recalled precisely, because here the clarity of the judgment depends on the clarity of the case. Our Lord walks through the grain fields on the Sabbath; his disciples, driven by hunger, pick heads of grain and eat them. The Pharisees do not deny the hunger or the fact itself. They question its classification. What in their reality is immediate sustenance, in their interpretation becomes a transgression. Shortly afterward, in the synagogue, a man with a withered hand appears. The same understanding that had recoded an act of necessity as sin now puts an act of healing to the test. The question is expressly formulated: “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?” And the text adds the intention: they ask this in order to accuse him. Christ brings the sick man to the center, questions those present about whether it is lawful to do good or evil, to save a life or let it be lost, and publicly heals the man. The case is thus fully established: real need, manifest good, precept invoked as an instrument of imputation.
It would be a poverty of intelligence to read this scene as if it opposed the gentleness of compassion to the rigor of the law. Here, it is not law and sentiment that appear, but two understandings of the law: one, faithful to its reason and its purpose; the other, reduced to its materiality and, for that very reason, already inclined to turn against the good it was meant to serve. The starting point must, therefore, be established without hesitation: Christ does not violate the law; he restores it when its interpretation has been corrupted. He does not evade it. He does not diminish it. He does not replace it with an emotional superiority. He judges it from that by which the law properly deserves the name of law.
Saint Thomas Aquinas offers here the key to all correct legal understanding: law is an ordinance of reason to the common good, promulgated by the one who has charge of the community. This definition is not a mere academic formula. It is the very structure of the problem. If law is an ordinance of reason, it cannot be understood apart from its rationale. If it is ordered to the common good, it cannot be rightly applied against the good to which it is directed. If it derives its legal entity from a higher practical reason, it cannot be degraded with impunity into verbal automatism without losing, in that process, something of its own nature. The letter is necessary; it is not sovereign. The text obliges; it is not self-founding. This is why Aquinas teaches that human law has the force of law insofar as it derives from natural law; and if it deviates from it in any way, it is no longer law, but a corruption of the law.
Such was precisely the Pharisaical error. It did not consist in loving the law too much, but in having ceased to understand it. The Sabbath rest, given to order man to God, was treated as an autonomous absolute. The means took the place of the end. The sign absorbed the substance. The instrumental became the supreme criterion. And once this inversion was complete, the law ceased to guide and began to accuse. The question "Is it lawful?" ceased to signify a search for justice and became a technique of condemnation. Interpretation had been replaced by procedure.
Here, one of the highest notions of classical legal thought comes into play: epieikeia, equity. Not as sentimental indulgence, nor as subjective mitigation, nor as tacit permission to evade the norm, but as legal justice in its most perfect form when the universality of the text alone is insufficient to resolve the singular case with rectitude. The law is established for what ordinarily occurs; but human life, due to its contingency, can present situations in which the material observance of the letter contradicts the very purpose of the precept. At that point, adhering to the letter does not perfect obedience: it degrades it. Not because the law is flawed, but because the law, being rational, was not given to produce the harm that its mechanical application would entail.
From this derives a crucial distinction: necessity is not an external cause that breaks the law, but an internal limit to its obligation. The law cannot compel the impossible; nor can it compel the destruction of the end for which it was instituted. It may be physically possible to observe the letter of the law and yet morally impossible to fulfill it, if such observance implies sacrificing the higher good that the norm was meant to protect. In such a case, the obligation ceases, not by dispensation, but by the impossibility of moral fulfillment. The law is not repealed; it ceases to be binding at that point.
The example of David, to which Christ refers, must be understood with the same clarity. David, persecuted and in need, arrives with his men at the priest Ahimelech's and asks for food. Since there was no ordinary bread, he receives the loaves of the Presence, reserved in principle for priestly use. Our Lord invokes this episode not to trivialize the sacred, but to show that a lower determination cannot operate, in a specific case, against a higher good. No privilege is introduced, nor is arbitrariness enshrined. It is recognized that necessity does not create a right, but rather reveals what the right requires when the ordinary application of a norm would become contradictory to its own purpose.
The same applies to the argument of the priests, who work on the Sabbath without incurring guilt. The point is crucial. Not everything that materially appears to infringe the norm formally constitutes its violation. The priests perform acts that, viewed purely externally, could be described as work; However, these same acts are ordered toward worship and, therefore, better fulfill the purpose of the precept than a purely material observance of rest. What appears on the surface as an exception is revealed, from the understanding of the order, as a higher fulfillment.
This requires distinguishing between moral precept and ceremonial precept. Morality is the duty to direct man to God. Ceremonial is the positive determination of the manner. The Pharisaic error consisted in absolutizing the ceremonial and obscuring the moral. Christ does not confront two equivalent laws; he restores their hierarchy. The sign cannot prevail over the substance; the manner cannot nullify the end. The Sabbath was not an end in itself, but a pedagogy. It prepared man for rest in God, not for the idolatry of ritual. The Old Law educated; it did not imprison. To remain focused on the sign when Reality is present is not fidelity, but spiritual infancy prolonged to the point of blindness.
The prophetic quote—"I desire mercy, not sacrifice"—establishes this hierarchy with perfect sobriety. It does not degrade sacrifice; it subordinates it. The means cannot become autonomous in relation to the end. Mercy does not appear here as a weak sentiment opposed to the law, but as an affirmation of the order of good willed by God. Therefore, the consequence is legal: a flawed reading of the law condemns the innocent. Where the understanding of the precept is corrupted, the application of the norm becomes unjust.
The statement "the Sabbath was made for man" must be understood in its rigor. It does not subject the law to human will; it declares its purpose. The law was instituted for the perfection of man in relation to God. Man is not the sovereign measure of law; he is its proper subject insofar as he is ordered to a higher end. The Sabbath is for man because man is for God. And God is not a distant legislator who multiplies obstacles, but the supreme Good who communicates order, truth, and life. When an interpretation turns the rule into an obstacle to that end, it is not the force of the precept that is revealed, but its corruption. The law is not a trap; it is an instrument. Stripped of its purpose, it ceases to function as law in that case.
At this point, the decisive affirmation appears: Christ is Lord of the Sabbath because He is Lord of the law. He does not stand before the law as an external interpreter, but as one who reveals its meaning from within. In Him, the law is not foreign. The eternal law, the natural law, and every right decision receive their measure from Him. His act is not disobedience, but jurisdiction. He does not break the order; He saves it. He does not relativize the law; He purifies it of its misinterpretation. He is not choosing between two opposing commandments, as if he were wavering between observance and exception. He is performing an act of royal prudence: He judges what the eternal law requires here and now in a specific case. Material obedience to the Sabbath, at that moment, would have been disobedience to the order of charity. And true obedience, for this very reason, does not consist in willful blindness, but in the rational docility of the will to what prudence recognizes as just.
From this follows a consequence regarding authority. Authority is a function of the good. Power is only legal insofar as it remains subordinate to the authority of justice. An office is not justified by its mere occupation, but by its proper exercise. Obedience is not blind servitude to the will of a superior, but an act of reason that recognizes in the command the voice of the common good. When the command deviates from that good, obedience is ordered to the higher principle from which the law derives its meaning. This is not because the subject establishes himself as a sovereign measure, but because law does not originate from the organ of power, but from its conformity to the reality of justice.
It can therefore be stated with complete precision that doing good can never be unlawful. Not as a slogan, but as a legal conclusion. Good possesses intrinsic legality. The law does not grant it validity; it presupposes it. When an interpretation proscribes the good that the law was meant to serve, that interpretation disqualifies itself. Law that turns against justice ceases to be justified as law.
Everything ultimately converges at the highest point. The good of humankind is not indeterminate. It is the salvation of souls. Humankind exists for salvation; therefore, the law exists for humankind. When the application of the law impedes this end, the law cannot be binding in that case without contradicting its very reason for being. This is not a tolerated exception, but rather the recognition that the ultimate end of the legal order cannot be sacrificed in the name of a lesser purpose. The law remains silent where it would seek to destroy that for which it was given.
From this follows a warning that should be formulated with sobriety: when a legal structure prioritizes its own preservation over the good for which it was instituted, it has begun to separate itself from its nature. It remains as an organization; it is emptied as an order. It preserves procedures; it loses justice. It does not disappear; it becomes an administration of itself.
And there remains an even deeper truth. Sabbath rest is not inertia, but joy. God's rest does not mean sterility, but rather contentment in the work accomplished. Therefore, healing on the Sabbath does not break the Sabbath rest; it fulfills it. Healing is restoring to humankind the capacity to enter once again into goodness. It is restoring them, as far as possible, to the order for which they were created. In this profound sense, healing is not a suspension of the Sabbath, but its truest fulfillment. Where humankind is restored to goodness, the Sabbath finds its meaning. Where God heals, rest becomes action.
The final statement—"it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath"—is not a concession, but a rule. A rule that does not diminish the law, but reveals it. A rule that does not weaken obedience, but purifies it. A rule that teaches that faithfulness does not consist in adhering to the surface of the commandment, but in conforming to the order of good that the commandment expresses.
Thus, in the controversy of the Sabbath, it is not Christ who appears as the accused. What appears on trial is a distorted conception of the law. And the verdict is inevitable: the law is only fully law when it remains ordered to truth, to goodness, and to the end willed by God. Outside of that order, it may retain form, force, and power; but it will have already begun to lose its justice.
Christ did not teach us to despise the law. He taught us to recognize when its interpretation has ceased to be law. And he did so as teacher and Lord of the law, the principle of its order, the measure of its justice, and the end of its fulfillment.






