(Homily 30th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year A)
The central message of this Sunday is condensed in the love of God and
neighbor. For
Christian love to be authentic, it has to be in forma crucis, vertically and horizontally (God and
neighbor). The first reading
of today hinges on the love of one’s neighbor, while the Gospel presents the
two wings of love: love of God and love of neighbor, and it is a re-presentation of the commandments in a new way. In Jesus’
parlance the love of God and the love of neighbor are interlaced. You cannot
have one authentically without the other. As a matter of fact, the love of God devoid of the love of
neighbour is nothing but a mere barren emotion; and in the same vein, without
the love of God, the love of neighbor is nothing but egoistic and self-centered
love. In the second reading, similar to the tone of last week, St. Paul
continues with the thanksgiving for the
spiritual progress of the Thessalonians in the Gospel. This passage reveals
the content of the major themes of St. Paul’s preaching, the abandonment of
idols for the worship of the True God: “you turned from idols to serve the
living and true God…”
In today’s
first reading (Ex. 22:20-26) we find
ourselves in the context when the Israelites have left Egypt. They were no longer under the dictatorial
laws of Pharaoh and the Egyptians. This reading presents a section of the
guiding rules God gave them on how to care for the weak and the needy in their
midst. So, this passage is an excerpt
from the book of the covenant between God and his people, as such, the
materials therein are related to legal codes of the Ancient Near East. The codes are formulated in the negative: “Do
not maltreat the widow…” But in the evangelical text St.
Mathew gives us a positive formulation: “you will love the Lord your God
with all your heart…” This passage
comes from a section of the code on social conduct, and it hinges on the love
of one’s neighbor. It gives us some
clues on the activeness and genuiness of love, thus: Do not molest a
stranger or oppress him. Do not maltreat the weak (orphans and widows). Do not
take interest from a poor man when you lend to him. If you take your neighbour’s
garment in pledge, restore it before the sun goes down. All these point to the
love of neighbor.
Reflecting
on the Gospel passage (Mt 22:34-40)
I think we have to thank this unknown doctor of the law for his question,
“Master what is the greatest commandment of the law?” (v.36). He asked the
question, not because he was desirous to know or to learn but because he wanted to put Jesus to the test (v.35). Even though the intention was
not good, Jesus profited from the occasion to give a great teaching on love. The
teaching of Jesus reveals that the heart of Christian religion is Love. The
essence of our being Christians is to Love. To the question
on the greatest commandment, Jesus
responded, offering three objects of love: God, the neighbour and oneself.
In answering the question
about the greatest commandment Jesus did not quote any of the Ten Commandments,
rather he summarized them in two parts:
love of God (from the first to the third commandment) and love of neighbor
(from the fourth to the tenth commandment). Thus, Jesus focused on the two
commandments: love of God and of neighbor. For the first, the Word of God says:
“you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your mind” (v.37), this entails that the love of God has to be
total, incomparable and without measures. And then for the second it says
“and your neighbor as yourself” (v.39),
because it is presumed that one ought to
love himself. However, we are going to see the novelty brought by
Jesus in the New Testament about the love of neighbor. In his response, Jesus used the verb in the future tense “you will
love”, which indicates that it is an
inconclusive act, to love is not a duty per
se, but a necessity for living, for in as much as man continues to exist he
is called to love. The response of Jesus could be seen as the summary of
the whole bible, both the Old and the New Testaments.
In the bid, to respond to his
interlocutor, Jesus enlisted two commandments already existent in the Old law,
but he unified them together, for he says that the second is like the first. In fact Jesus
took his response from the book of Deuteronomy (6:4-5): “Shema O Israel: Yahweh our God is the one, the only
Yahweh. You must love Yahweh your God with all your heart, with all your soul,
with all your strength”, that is with regards to the love of God, while the love of the neighbour alludes to
Leviticus (19:18): “You will not
exact vengeance on, or bear any sort of grudge against, the members of your
race, but you will love your neighbor as yourself”. In
the time of Jesus there were known to be 613 commandments in the Jewish Law. These two commandments were dispersed in the 613
prescriptions of the law (365 prohibitions and 248 actions to be carried out).
Once again in the response of
Jesus we see the third aspect of the two commandments, which calls the
attention of man to love himself, “love your neighbor as you love yourself”,
because one who is not capable of loving himself, cannot love others. But Jesus took this to another level, to
its Christological dimension, is no longer love your neighbor as
yourself, but love one another as I have loved you” (Jn. 13:34: 15:12), here Jesus becomes the model and the reason of
love of the neighbor. Unlike in the Old Testament (Lev. 19:18). In some other
passages of the Gospel Jesus deepened the modality of loving our neighbor and
broadened the concept of neighborhood. There is indeed, a new sense that
Jesus brought in, he called us to love our neighbor not as oneself, but as He (Jesus) loved us, because now everyone
(especially those in need) as Jesus taught in the parable of the Good Samaritan
(Lk. 10:25:37) is our neighbor.
Thus, there is a passage from the Old
Testament restricted sense of neighborhood to Jesus universalistic and
inclusive sense of neighborhood. At the basis of this, is an invitation to
love our neighbor without measures. For and with Jesus the concept of
neighborhood acquired a universal meaning without discrimination of race,
colour, religion or territory. My neighbour
therefore, is someone I have to be close to, somebody in need. We remember the
words of Jesus at the episode of the last judgement “In truth I tell you, in so
far as you did this to one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did it
to me” and again “In truth I tell you, in so far as you neglected to do this to
one of the least of these, you neglected to do it to me” (Mt. 25: 40,45). This
reminds us of this sacrament of love and our neighbor as a sacrament of God.
He who truly loves God cannot but love his fellow man (neighbour). The neighbor in Jesus parlance is similar to God, for the neighbor bears
the image of God.
The love we are talking about
originates from God, for God is the source of love. The word of God says that
“God is love” (1Jn. 4:8b) and thus
“everyone who loves is a child of God and knows God” (1Jn. 4:7), therefore, as human beings we are objects of God’s Love, for we experience it daily, but also we are
called to be subjects of God’s love,
to become channel of God’s love to our neighbors. For Jesus the love of God and the love of
neighbour are like two sides of the same coin. Little wonder, tells us that:
“anyone who says I love God and hates his brother is a liar, since whoever does
not love the brother whom he can see cannot love God whom he has not seen” (1Jn. 4:20-21). Indeed this is the
commandment we have received from him, that whoever loves God, must also love his brother”. We can see
the imperative on must, there is no
negotiation about it.
Furthermore,
it behooves us to affirm vehemently in this
reflection, that though in the parlance of the great French Philosopher Rene
Descartes man is an “res cogitas” but before becoming “res
cogitas”, man was and still is “res cogitata”, that is to say that
before becoming thinking beings, we were already thought of by God, and being
thought of by God is a revelation of God’s love. God in deed, is the source of
love.
For Jesus these two
commandments are interconnected, for love comes from God and St. John makes it
glaring thus: “dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone
who loves has been born of God and knows God” (1Jn. 4:7). Love indeed,
is the manifestation of the true knowledge of God. Here, when we talk about
“knowledge” we don’t mean “knowledge” (gnosis)
tout court, rather we are talking
about epignosis, that’s real,
practical and experiential knowledge, an incarnated knowledge. St. Paul links epignosis
with love (cf. Phil. 1:9-11; Eph. 4:13).
Give or take, the
authenticity of our faith is shown when we put these two commandments into
practice. Thus we can say: no love no
faith in God. Little wonder St. Paul affirms that “faith works through
love” (Gal. 5:6). And in the letter
of St. James we read, “faith without works is dead” (Jm. 2:17), the vitality of
faith is given by good works. St. John once again in his first letter
brings it to a drammatic conclusion as he says: “Children our love must be not
just words or mere talk, but something active and genuine” (1Jn. 4:18). So, how is our love to be active and genuine? On this,
the first and the second readings gives us some guidelines.
In the
second reading (1Th 1:5-10) instead St.
Paul presents the community of Thessalonica as a model for other Christian
communities, because they welcomed the word of God with joy. Not only that they welcomed the word of God
but they equally translated it into concrete life situations. They got
converted and turned to God abandoning their idols. This no doubt points to
their love of God. Likewise, for us to love God with all our heart, soul and
mind, we too need to abbandon our idols, not necessarily other gods, but those
things that divide and deviate our attention from God. We need to abandon our self-made idols, object-idles and person-idles.
Above all, my beloved brothers and sisters
in and of Nigeria, an approach to the second commandment about love could be by
reflecting on how we love ourselves, ranging from our leaders to the led. Love
of neighbour becomes virtually impossible in the agony of self-hatred in which
some fearful, discouraged people can find themselves. Loving the other as
oneself only becomes possible if we have, or can gain, a healthy, sane level of
self-appreciation. With the state of things in our country today, we need to embark on the commitment and on
the outreach of love and justice. Let us shun and do away with tribal prejudices and
political divide, prejudices feed not on facts but on feelings. Is
quite unfortunate that in our dear country we are swimming in the pool of blood
of our innocent brothers and sisters massacred by those who ought to protect
them. A nation that slaughters her youth
befuddles her hope! Today, war and rebellion, economic disorder, famine,
massacre, oppression, corruption and looting threaten every State, are these
the presages of the destruction of the entity called Nigeria or the turning
point that gives birth to a New Nigeria? In my outreach for love and justice I
join my voice to the voices of all Nigerian Youths and all Nigerians who have
the peace and development of this country at heart to decry for the end of clueless
government, of the dehumanization of the human life, of greed, of corruption
and of the politics of the winner takes it all! We need a transformation in
people and in the social structures. Let love and justice lead!
In conclusion,
for Christian love to be authentic, it has to be in forma crucis, vertically and
horizontally (God and neighbor). Little wonder, the cross is our sign of love and victory.
That is why Jesus transformed a sign of shame to a sign of salvific love. In
all, we are called to be witnesses of love: “from this all
we know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (Jn.13:35). Love no doubt, is the distinguishing Christian personality trait that enables us to be who God wants
us to be! Lord Jesus inspire us to love you and to love one another! Amen!!!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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