OT 30 [A]: Ex
22:20-26; I Thes 1:5c-10; Mt 22:34-40
A man
attending a crowded Church service refused to take his hat off when asked to do
so by the ushers. The preacher was perturbed too, and after the service told
the man that the Church was quite happy to have him as guest, and invited him
to join the Church, but he explained the traditional decorum regarding men’s
hats and said, “I hope you will conform to that practice in the future.” “Thank
you,” said the man. “And thank you for taking time to talk to me. It was good
of you to ask me to join the congregation. In fact, I joined it three years ago
and have been coming regularly ever since, but today is the first day anyone
ever paid attention to me. After being an unknown for three years, today, by
simply keeping on my hat, I had the pleasure of talking to the ushers. And now
I have a conversation with you, who have always appeared too busy to talk to me
before!” –- What do we do to make strangers welcome? Are we too busy that we
have no time to keep the greatest commandment? When we come together to worship
we can express our love for God by worshipping him and also loving our neighbor
which is the flip side of the coin of loving God.
The central
theme of today’s readings is the greatest Commandment in the Bible, namely, to
respond to God’s Infinite Love for us by loving Him, and to express that love
in action by loving Him in our neighbor.
In the
Judaism of Jesus’ day, there was a double tendency to expand the Mosaic Law
into hundreds of rules and regulations and to condense the 613 precepts of the
Torah into a single sentence or few sentences. (The Pharisees identified
613 commandments in the Torah (the first five books of the Bible). Two hundred forty-eight were
positive (“thou shalt”) and three hundred sixty-five were negative (“thou shalt
not”). Jesus’ answer teaches us that the most important commandment is to love
God in loving others and to love others in loving God. In other words, we are
to love God and express it by loving our neighbor because God lives in him or
her. Jesus’ answer was very orthodox, and very traditional. “The summary of the
law is not original with Jesus. Its two parts represent a combination of Dt 6:5 and Lev 19:18.
The
first verse that Jesus quoted was part of the Shema, the basic and
essential creed of Judaism. This is the sentence with which every Jewish
service still opens, and the first text which every Jewish child
commits to memory.
Jesus
combined the originally separate commandments and presented them as the
essence of true religion. The uniqueness of Jesus’ response consisted in the
fact that he understood the two laws as having equal value or importance. Loving
God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength as our response to His Love for
us means that we should place God’s will ahead of ours, seek the Lord’s will in
all things, and make it paramount in our lives. There are several means by
which we can express our love for God and our gratitude to Him for His
blessings, acknowledging our total dependence on Him. We must keep God’s
commandments, and offer daily prayers of thanksgiving, praise and petition. We
also need to read and meditate on His word in the Bible and accept His
invitation to join Him in the Mass and other liturgical functions when we can.
God’s will
is that we should love everyone, seeing Him in our neighbor. Since every human
being is the child of God and the dwelling place of the Spirit of God, we are
actually giving expression to our love of God by loving our neighbor as Jesus
loves him or her. This means we need to help, support, encourage, forgive, and
pray for everyone without discrimination based on color, race, gender, age,
wealth, personal attractiveness, or social status. Forgiveness, too, is vital.
We love others by refusing to hold a grudge for a wrong done to us. Even a
rebuke can be an act of love, if it is done with the right heart.
Christian
love is much more about what we decide to do than about what we
happen to feel. Usually, we associate the word love with some pleasant
feelings, intense and delightful emotions. But the word Jesus used means
something much deeper. It is the word "agape" [AH-gah-pay], and
it refers to the love that means desiring union with something that
is good in itself. If we love ice cream, it means we love eating ice
cream because it tastes good, we love becoming one with ice
cream, entering into communion with ice cream. The communion is
essential part of real love.
If we love
a person, it means we love spending time with them, getting
to know them, sharing the experiences of life with them.
Christian
love for our neighbor requires seeing them the way God sees them, but we
can only do that if our mind and heart are full of God's perspective,
which happens through prayer. This is why the Catechism can say that
"we live as we pray" (CCC #2752).
Today Jesus
will pour his grace into our hearts once again in this Mass. As he
does, let's beg him to teach all of us not only to understand these
two great commandments, but to live them to the max.
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