Thirtieth
Sunday in OT A 2020
One of the
Pharisees, a scholar of the law, tested Jesus by asking: “Teacher, which
commandment in the law is the greatest?”
As in last week’s Gospel in asking Jesus: “Is it lawful to pay the
census tax to Caesar or not,” the Pharisees seek to engage Jesus in debate and
to win the argument. Good luck with
that.
Jesus
responded: “You shall love the Lord your God, with all your heart, with all
your soul, and with all your mind. This
is the greatest and first commandment.
The second is like it: You shall
love your neighbor as yourself. The
whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments.”
These two commandments are the
currency of God’s kingdom, a currency completely different from last week’s Roman coin and
completely different from the self-centered transactions that too often
characterize our contemporary way of life.
Being indifferent to or hating others is to deny the existence of God’s
presence in one’s neighbor.
Jesus’
answer was not a particular law, now even two particular laws. His answered demanded a new lifestyle, a way
of living that draws us so close to God that we become His presence for
others. The law tells us what we have
done wrong. Love tells who we can
be. While this linking of the two great
commandments was not unique to Jesus, it does get at the heart of Jesus’
mission and ministry.
Jesus is not
attempting to do away with the law and the prophets by reducing everything to
the so-called new commandment. This
commandment becomes the lens through which everything is to be seen. It is the interpretative key for
understanding all of revelation.
Meaningful
discipleship is not found in the mere observance of law. Meaningful religion is lived out in a
triangle of love – love for God, love for others, and love for self. In that triangle of love is found the secret
of a fulfilling life on earth and a foretaste of the life to come.
If you ask
yourself, what does God want of us, what is God’s priority for us? God’s priority for us is that we love our
neighbor as our self. For Jesus, our
neighbor is anyone and everyone, unconditionally, no exceptions. To say again, for Jesus, our neighbor is
anyone and everyone, unconditionally, no exceptions.
I recommend
for your reading and prayer Pope Francis’ most recent encyclical FRATELLI
TUTTI. Pope Francis invites to pray over
the parable of the Good Samaritan. Pope
Francis challenges us with the meditation that each day we have to decide
whether to be a Good Samaritan or indifferent bystanders as we come upon the
needy and the hurting people of our community.
The Pope asks: “Will we bend down and to touch and heal the wounds of
others?”
Our intimacy
with the Lord will be based on the love and intimacy we have shared with all of
God’s people. The first Scripture
reading from the book of Exodus concretizes Jesus’ teaching. The alien, the orphan and the poor are our
neighbors.
May the next
rosary we pray be for those it is difficult for us to understand and for those
it is difficult to love.
In a family
or in a religious community or in a parish community, it is not easy to love
those who reject the way of life of the family, of the religious community or
of the parish. Loving these people does
not mean rejecting the way of life handed down by the Lord. It does mean seeking ways to love those who
reject it. This is part of the ongoing
challenge of following Jesus Christ
May we be
transformed by God’s grace, who desires us to care for all among us who are in
need, not just because particular laws govern us but because the love of God
and neighbor burns in us.
We pray
today that we might love God so deeply that we will have no choice but to bring
God’s love to those around us.
This is not
to say all of us are ready to be canonized because we have already mastered the
commandment of love, but may it be the desire of our hearts to make love the
first requirement of our discipleship of the Lord Jesus.
The poet
Maya Angelou was once asked what her lifetime goals were. She answered that she wanted to become a
Christian. Now Maya Angelou was already
a Christian. Her point was that
Christianity is an ongoing process of becoming. Everyday we take steps to become a
Christian.
In all humility, may all of us identify with the lifetime goal of Maya Angelou and strive always to become more Christian, to live the first requirement of our discipleship of the Lord Jesus – our love of God and our love of one another.
With each
Eucharist we celebrate, in the Penitential Rite we acknowledge the areas of our
life in which Jesus is not yet Lord, the ways that we have not loved God and
our neighbor. Thankfully and gratefully
we are the recipients of the merciful love of Jesus, and we commit ourselves to
be people who love one another.
And so, we
pray, Lord, let love be the guiding principle of all I say and think. For our life as a disciple of Jesus requires
that we treat all –especially the most vulnerable – with dignity. Again, being indifferent to or hating others
is to deny the existence of God’s presence in one’s neighbor
Have a
Blessed day.
No comments:
Post a Comment