Seventh
Sunday in OT A 2020
The fifth,
sixth, and seventh chapters of the Gospel of Matthew comprise the teachings of
Jesus in His Sermon on the Mount.
Today’s Gospel passage is the rhetorical highpoint of Jesus’s teaching
from this sermon. Listen again to the
words of Jesus:
“Offer no
resistance to one who is evil…Turn the other cheek…Hand over your cloak as
well…love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you…So be perfect, just
as your heavenly Father is perfect.”
Yes, to love
your enemies is the greatest test of love.
These are kind and beautiful words when they are spoken in Church, but
the thing is these words are hardly ever spoken outside of Church. They are not spoken out on the street or in
the relationships of our lives when we have been hurt or betrayed or lied to.
The first
Scripture reading from the Book of Leviticus tees up today’s Gospel message.
“The Lord said to Moses: “Speak to the
whole Israelite community and tell them. ‘You shall not bear hatred for your
brother or sister in your heart.’”
I think of the saintly Nelson Mandela who was
wrongly imprisoned and abused for 27 years.
When he was elected the President of South Africa following his
imprisonment, what did he do? He invited
those who imprisoned and tortured him to first row seats for his presidential
inauguration. He declared that I would
be the loser if I could not forgive those who imprisoned him. I would suggest that Nelson could only have
experienced healing and forgiveness in his heart by the grace of God.
By telling
his followers to turn the other cheek, Jesus calls on them to resist tendencies
toward punishment. Implicitly, Jesus
introduces the idea of reconciliation rather than retaliation. Jesus does not want his followers to be
abused and taken advantage of, as the passage might suggest. When Jesus says, “Offer no resistance to one
who is evil.” He does not mean to do
nothing in the face of injustice, Jesus insists that his community reject and
work against retaliation by focusing on love.
Jesus
advocates love over hate. Loving our
enemies is the greatest test of love.
For some of us, this requires spiritual heart surgery. We come again to
Ash Wednesday, the entry point for another 40 Day journey toward Easter. We are signed with the ashes of repentance,
of our awareness of our limitations, of our need for conversion. We willingly embrace Lenten spiritual
disciplines so that we can prepare ourselves for the grace of conversion, for
the joy of Easter.
The Season
of Lent isn’t just about doing without or giving up something; the real meaning
of Lent is the Church’s annual call to conversion. It involves a change of mind-set. We seek to put on Christ and to live by the
values of the Gospel. It is to move the
focus away from self-centeredness and to become God-centered in our life
perspective.
In this holy
season of Lent, may our reflection on the ministry of Jesus lead us to deepen
our holy longing for God in our lives.
May we respond to the Church’s call to conversion as we put on Christ and
as we express our solidarity with people in need.
Questions to
ask ourselves:
How can I
work toward reconciliation instead of retaliation?
Who do I
need to love?
Who do I
need to pray for?
Who is m
enemy that needs to be loved?
As we engage
in the spiritual disciplines of prayer, fasting, and self-denial, we seek to develop some spiritual will
power. But to delve into the deeper
meaning of our Lenten spiritual disciplines, may we pray again over the Lord’s
Sermon of the Mount in today’s Gospel.
The first
requirement of discipleship of Jesus is to love
-- even to love our enemies, to strive for reconciliation rather than
retaliation.
For us to
love our enemies, to offer no resistance, to turn the other cheek and to share
our cloak with someone in need, we seek the grace of the Word of God that is
spoken as ashes on placed on our foreheads this Ash Wednesday: “Turn away from sin and be faithful to the
Gospel.”
The message is
we are all one family under God.
Consider
this, whenever we sin we are disconnected from God and become His “enemies”
(James 4:4), but His love for us does not go extinct (Romans 5:7-10). He keeps
looking out for us with his love as the father of the prodigal son (Luke
15:11-31). On the cross, our Lord Jesus Christ showed love to his executioners
(enemies) when he tearfully prayed for them: “Father, forgive them for they do
not know what they are doing?” Don’t you think that those enemies of yours do
not know what they are doing and need your love?
Today’s
message of love is a very tough one; it is at the same time the only way. To
bring the message closer to us, we are encouraged to love without limits. Your
enemy deserves more love and compassion from you than anyone else. To love is
not a choice; it is rather a grave instruction.
In the Gospel of John
(13:34-35), our Lord Jesus presents a new framework for love as he says:
I give
you a new commandment that you love one another. Just as I have loved you,
you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my
disciples if you have love for one another.
From the
passage above, we learn that love is a normative prescription for our Christian
life. Furthermore, it gives those who embrace it an identity “by this everyone
will know that you are my disciples.”
In the words
of the great mystic, St. John of the Cross:
“In the evening of life, we will be judged by love alone.”
Have a
Blessed Day.
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