Dear Preachers:
There is a wonderful moment of mutual accord in
today’s gospel. A scribe asks Jesus, “Which is the first of all the
commandments?” Jesus gives his reply and the scribe gives his approval, “Well
said, teacher....” At that moment there is a great meeting and agreement between
the best of the Jewish and Christian traditions: that love of God has precedence
over all other religious requirements, observances and loyalties. This love of
God requires the giving of our entire self and when it is given, love of
neighbor will be the necessary and visible manifestation of our love for God.
Love of God is shown to be authentic when it is made visible in love of
neighbor, for God comes to us concretely in the presence of our sisters and
brothers. The first lectionary reading and today’s gospel show these close
parallels.
In the Deuteronomy reading, Moses has gathered the Israelites on the banks of
the Jordan. The people are about to take possession of the Promise Land, but
Moses will not go with them, he will die before they cross the river. He gives
his final address to the people and reminds them that they have only one God and
that they are to love God with all their being. That’s our first reading of the
text – the clear narrative piece. But the Book of Deuteronomy was written long
after the narrated event, when the nation was prosperous and well ensconced in
the land. So, there is another setting for today’s reading and another
application.
The people were settled and secure and, in such situations, a nation and a
religion can become complacent and rely on their own strengths and notions.
Thus, in presenting Moses’ guiding words, Deuteronomy is calling the people to
turn from self reliance back to God. The authority and prestige of Moses is used
to remind them that their first loyalty is to the God who liberated them from
slavery. When the nation collapses and is taken off to captivity, the exiles
will look back on their foolishness in relying on political and military power
while ignoring God their Creator and Sustainer. Perhaps the defeated and humbled
exiles will hear the echo of Moses’ ancient advice to the incipient nation and
realize a moment of rebirth, by once again turning to God and loving God with
all their, “...heart...soul and...strength.”
Moses’ words may find us worshipers in different places in our lives. For those
who are constant in their piety, today is a chance to affirm their decision to
serve God and be nourished at this Eucharist so they can continue to be faithful
servants. Others, aware of their self reliance and “independent spirits,” may be
reminded that their primary loyalty and dependence is on God, all else is
secondary and can easily be taken away. Finally, there may be some in the
congregation who, like the exiles, have seen their world shaken and collapse and
need to be renewed in hope. They hear Moses’ reminder that we are called to love
God totally because that is what God has first done for us – loved us with full
“heart, soul and strength.” Such a God will come to the help of the broken and
displaced because that’s just God’s nature.
We want to be careful today not to preach a message that is solely a command to
love God and neighbor. The command to love God so completely doesn’t come as a
command from a dictator God who wishes slave-like docility and complete
dedication. You can’t demand such love by issuing a decree from on-high. Moses
calls the people to such love because they have been freely chosen by God. For
forty years they have wandered the desert and come to know their God as a God of
love. Moses is asking them to respond from their “heart, soul and strength,”
already touched and transformed by God’s love.
The transformation caused by God’s love is so profound that it flows from us
towards God and is expressed in love of neighbor. Like Moses, Jesus calls us to
love God with our entire being because his life and death are a manifestation of
God’s love for each of us. He reminds us that God is the center and abiding
presence in our lives by quoting the “Shema,” Israel’s great affirmation of
faith and love of God. One imagines that the words taken from Deuteronomy come
quickly to Jesus’ consciousness and lips because, as a devout Jew, he would have
prayed the prayer each morning and evening, “Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our
God, the Lord alone!” Jesus speaks the spirit of the Torah, his response to the
scribe draws on Deuteronomy and confesses that love of God is our primary desire
and goal.
The rabbis could count 613 commandments of the Torah. Of these, 248 were
positive in form and 365 negative. The religious teachers debated which were
“heavy” commandments and which were “light.” So, in religious circles a point of
discussion would be: which of these commandments was “first” or most important.
Hence the setting for the question the scribe asks Jesus. In his response Jesus
quotes two commands from the Hebrew scriptures and, in doing that, suggests that
no one commandment can adequately answer the scribe’s question. By putting the
two together Jesus also suggests that the two constitute one great commandment.
Jesus wouldn’t have been perceived by devout Jews as abrogating the rest of the
Torah. What they would have heard was Jesus’ way of simplifying the Law to help
in its observance.
The second commandment, from Leviticus (19:18), assumes that people love
themselves; that they protect, care for and tend to their own concerns. Jesus’
challenge is that we show this love to others. In the Old Testament context
there is a narrow sense of who the “neighbor” is; it would be family members, or
those belonging to the nation. In Jesus’ teachings, especially in the parable of
the Good Samaritan, he extends the sense of “neighbor” beyond any ethnic or
religious confines. For him, love of God and neighbor are not “first” and
“second” – they constitute one commandment greater than all the others.
The scribe understands and agrees with Jesus. He states that the law of love of
God and neighbor is greater than any of the religious observances and laws
concerning sacrifices. Revered Temple worship and sacrifice must take second
place to the observance and sacrifice that comes with loving God and neighbor.
Jesus says that the scribe has answered wisely about the superiority of love
over any sacrifice and then says to him, “You are not far from the kingdom of
God.” But the scribe has shown wisdom and is in agreement with Jesus, what more
could he lack?
He will need to receive the kingdom as a child, as Jesus has taught. He will
have to acknowledge he cannot earn entrance into the kingdom by any deed or
observance; that he is totally dependent on God for the gift of membership in
the kingdom. Then, as a member of the kingdom, he must live the commandment
Jesus has taught about loving God and neighbor. Remember that Mark’s gospel
began with a promise by John the Baptist that the one who was coming after him
was mightier and would baptize with the Holy Spirit (1:7-8). The new life Jesus
gives is the gift of the Spirit and enables recipients to fulfill the law of
love he has articulated for the scribe. The scribe is, “not far from the kingdom
of God.” But he can only enter it through the gift God gives.
Click here for a link to this Sunday’s readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/110324.cfm
QUOTABLE
(This
is how the webpage of the El Paso diocese describes its bishop, Most
Reverend Mark J. Seitz)
“The
bishop believes that migrants add inestimable value to the
communities where they choose to live and that parishes and
community members should welcome them with compassion, love and
solidarity.” |
JUSTICE BULLETIN
BOARD
You shall love your neighbor as
yourself.
Mark 12:31
A memo got posted recently on Facebook from
Prophetic Imagination that is very pertinent to today’s scripture passage:
“Are they here legally?” is a modern version of
“Who is my neighbor?” They are both questions used to determine if we have
justification to mistreat and harm others.
It is easy to love the neighbor who speaks my language or looks like me or
shares my religious practices. It is another story to embrace and share from my
own resources those who are “other” than me. I might be tempted to make a gift
to them conditional on their following my way but that is not what Jesus says.
He says--love the other as you love yourself PERIOD. This includes immigrants no
matter their status. Every human being is made in the image of God and is
deserving of respect and a life of dignity. For Jesus, love of God, self, and
other characterizes the reign of God on earth.
St. Pope John Paul II states: Christians must learn to make their act of faith
in Christ by discerning His voice in the cry for help that rises from this world
of poverty. (Novo Millennio Ineunte , 2001). We cannot be disciples of Jesus and
only study the teachings of our faith. We must also take leaps of faith and
respond to the cry of the children of God who are disenfranchised and forgotten.
Pope Francis writes: We must make our immigrant brothers and sisters feel that
they are citizens, that they are like us, children of God, that they are
immigrants like us, because we are all immigrants moving toward another
homeland, and perhaps we will all arrive there. And no one will get lost on the
way! We are all immigrants, children of God who has placed us all on a journey.
It cannot be said: “But immigrants are like this.... We are...”. No! We are all
immigrants, we are all on a journey. And this word that we are all immigrants is
not written in a book, it is written in our flesh, in our journey of life, which
assures us that in Jesus we are all children of God, beloved children, wanted
children, saved children. Let us consider this: we are all immigrants on the
journey of life, none of us has a fixed abode in this land, we all must go.
(3/21/15)
Don’t forget to vote and keep immigrants in mind.
Barbara Molinari Quinby, MPS, Director
Office of Human Life, Dignity, and Justice Ministries
Holy Name of Jesus
Cathedral, Raleigh, NC
FAITH BOOK
Mini-reflections on the Sunday
scripture readings designed for persons on the run. “Faith Book” is also
brief enough to be posted in the Sunday parish bulletins people take home.
From today’s Gospel reading:
Jesus said, “Hear O Israel!
The Lord our God is Lord alone!
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength....
You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
Reflection:
Jesus invites us to see that God alone is our God.
God alone gives meaning to our lives and so we are to love God totally – all of
our heart, soul, mind and strength. Living in that love, we are to love
ourselves and one another. Nothing is greater than this embracing love, and to
teach our young ones about this God, is the greatest gift we can leave them.
So we ask ourselves:
-
What legacy are we hoping to leave our
children?
-
Will they remember the full and rich love we
had for God and our neighbor, and the many ways we expressed that love?
-
Do they perceive that love of God and love of
neighbor is the fundamental value of our lives?
POSTCARDS TO DEATH ROW INMATES
"One has to strongly affirm that condemnation
to the death penalty is an inhuman measure that humiliates personal dignity,
in whatever form it is carried out." ---Pope Francis
Inmates on death row are the most forgotten people
in the prison system. Each week I am posting in this space several inmates’
names and locations. I invite you to write a postcard to one or more of them to
let them know that: we have not forgotten them; are praying for them and their
families; or, whatever personal encouragement you might like to give them. If
the inmate responds, you might consider becoming pen pals.
Please write to:
Lawrence Peterson #0320825 (On death row since
12/12/1996)
Henry Wallace #0422350 (1/29/1997)
Terrence Taylor #0539901 (2/18/1997)
----Central Prison P.O. 247 Phoenix, MD 21131
Please note: Central Prison is in
Raleigh, NC., but for security purposes, mail to inmates is processed through a
clearing house at the above address in Maryland.
For more information on the Catholic position on
the death penalty go to the Catholic Mobilizing Network:
http://catholicsmobilizing.org/resources/cacp/
On this page you can sign “The National Catholic
Pledge to End the Death Penalty.” Also, check the interfaith page for People of
Faith Against the Death Penalty: http://www.pfadp.org/
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