Here is the homily I gave to the pastor during our meeting today on the readings for this Sunday. His reply: "But what impact do the readings have on you?"...well...uh...yeah...but...
Works consulted: A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture, Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, Navarre Bible Commentary, and In Conversation with God.
Last weekend, after our Lord showed the Pharisees and the Herodians the true meaning of faithful citizenship, they marveled and went away. Before our Gospel reading today, the Sadducees who denied the Resurrection, tried to stump Jesus but they too “were astonished at his teaching.” Now the Pharisees will try one last time. Infuriated that he was able to silence the Sadducees, the Pharisees gathered around our Lord and, putting forward their most clever scribe, they asked him, “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” By calling him Teacher they again show false humility as they did when they asked him about paying taxes to Caesar. “Teacher” was a title used with humility and respect, yet they thought they already knew it all.
With this question they again hoped to stump him. In the old Jewish Law there were 613 laws which the scribes and Pharisees rigidly imposed on God’s people. Their yoke was not easy, their burden was not light. These 613 laws were divided into light and grave offenses with the grave ones being punishable by death. And they were further divided into small and great, with our Lord’s questioner interested only in the greatest of them all. “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” he asked.
To this Jesus gave a two-part answer, the first part easily recognizable to any faithful Jew. “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 the first commandment.” This is a direct reference to Deut 6:5, a prayer called the Shema which is Hebrew for the first word of the prayer: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord, and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.” Faithful Jews prayed this prayer three times a day, every day. Therefore, it’s the second part of our Lord’s response that would have been the most surprising to his audience. Jesus continues, “The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Here, in an unprecedented way He formally joins love of God to love of neighbor by quoting Lev 19:18 “You shall not take vengeance or bear any grudge against the sons of your own people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the Lord.” Such a combination of texts is nowhere to be found in the writings of the rabbis down through the centuries. The prevailing Jewish attitude toward non-Jews was of bitter contempt.
In this episode, Jesus again answers the question they should have asked. Earlier when they asked him, “Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar?” he answered with what should be paid to Caesar and to God. Here they ask him which commandment in the law is the greatest and he gives them the greatest and the second-greatest! The reason he does this is because he understands the true spirit of the Old Law and here he does not wish to separate love of God from love of our neighbor. These two commandments summarize the spirit of the entire Old Testament and of all 613 of its laws. They even summarize the 10 commandments we all know and love today.
True love of God leads us to love our neighbor. St. Thomas Aquinas said, “When man is loved, God is loved, for man is the image of God.” This is also echoed elsewhere in Scripture. The first letter of St. John tells us, “If anyone says, ‘I love God’, and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen. And this commandment we have from him, that he who loves God should love his brother also” (1 Jn 4:20-21). But who is our brother/neighbor?
The Jews, before and during the time of Christ, had a strict interpretation of the term “neighbor.” They had a strong national identity and a bond with each other as the chosen Sons of God, his people set-apart to bring the entire world to Him. Therefore, naturally, “neighbor” was a fellow Jew. But, just as Jesus was the first to formally join the two texts of the Old Testament together, love of God in Deuteronomy to love of neighbor in Leviticus, so was he the first to expand the notion of neighbor beyond their national identity. So who then is our neighbor? A scribe in Luke’s Gospel asked our Lord this very question and he answered with the story of the Good Samaritan.
We all know the story, right? There a Jew is robbed, stripped, beaten, and left for dead. When the Jewish priests and Levites, who were trained in the law and thus more responsible for it, passed him by, finally a hated Samaritan stopped to help. But, he doesn’t just bandage him up and run away even though he could have because there was such hatred between the Jews and Samaritans. No, he poured water and wine on his wounds, took him to an inn, cared for him, and paid for everything. In this story the Samaritan teaches us that our neighbor is everyone in need, friend or enemy. Every person is my neighbor, more particularly the one in need.
This story of the Good Samaritan also teaches what love is and how to love. Christ is the Good Samaritan, the wounded man is the human race robbed and beaten by sin and the devil, the oil and wine are the sacraments and the inn is the Church where we are cared for and where our wounds are healed. Love is not a feeling. Love is not a twinkle in the eye or butterflies in the stomach. Love is an act of the will, to will the good of another whether it feels good or not; to put another’s good before our own. Imagine what it felt like to be the Samaritan. He knew the Jews hated his people and he was in their land. He probably was afraid and wanted to journey as quickly as he could. But, knowing the true spirit of the Old Law himself, and loving God first, he was moved to love his wounded neighbor despite the fact that he was a Jew. And this love had no mushy, buddy-buddy feelings to it. It was probably expensive to use his oil and wine on the man’s wounds but he did it anyway. It was probably difficult and dirty and tiring to dress up his wounds on the side of the road. It probably didn’t feel good and probably took a lot of energy to pick up the man and place him on his horse and then slowly ride him back into town despite the jeers of other priests and Levites who passed by. Then the Samaritan cared for the man all through the night and paid two days wages to ensure that he would be taken care of at the inn while he was gone. This is true love, my brothers and sisters, a love centered on love of God and self-sacrifice. If the Samaritan’s love for the wounded Jew hadn’t come from the overflow of love for God then the Jew would have been an obstacle between the Samaritan and God. It wouldn’t have been true love. And if the Samaritan had waited to feel love before he showed it then he may not have showed it at all. Now, to be sure, when great feelings come with love then they are good and can bring much Joy. But, remember: Love is not a feeling, it is an act of the will.
How do you love God? How do you love your spouse? Your family? Your coworkers? Your classmates? Your friends? Your neighbor? Love God first and you will love the rest. But if you love your spouse first or your family first then your love is out of order. When you love Him then you will be able to love others as He does, as Christ does, with patience and sacrifice. Then you will care for what matters most: the salvation of the souls God has placed in your path. Then like Christ, you will be their Good Samaritan. As you journey, go to where your family, your friends, your coworkers are and bring them to the Inn of the Church where they can be saved by the “oil and wine” of our holy sacraments, a salvation paid for not by two days wages, but with the priceless grace of our Lord, Jesus Christ, our rock, our fortress, our shield, our strength.
2 comments:
good comment from Fr. Bradshaw... while it's important not to go overboard with it (we all know the guys who do...), I've always thought that in a certain sense I preach to myself. I wouldn't say preach ABOUT yourself, but TO yourself that is good advice...how does the reading or the particular part of the faith challenge you? Odds are, many people in the congregation are challenged in a similar way. Junst my thoughts...
Dear Fr. Matthew,
A very good homily. You put the passage being quoted in context; you explain the situation in Judaism at that time; you linked it to other passages in both the Old and New Testaments to show that the message is consistent; and you quote other church authorities. From all of these you present a concise and informative message.
But I do have one comment. After such a good first half you then leave Matthew’s gospel and your real message is a sermon on Luke’s understanding of this passage. That will be much appreciated in Year C, but this is Year A and you didn’t follow up on Matthew’s take on this saying of Jesus.
One of Luke’s themes is, as you clearly say, the inclusion of the Gentiles in the new Church. Matthew similarly shows this, but really it is not one of his main themes.
I am reluctant to offer too much opinion here as I guess you know a lot more about this than myself, but two observations come to mind.
Firstly, as you point out, this is the third of three questions. But these are not simply quoted to show that Jesus outwitted everyone; rather the three answers make a picture. The first is about the civil law, the second – and I am not sure about this – is about natural law, and the third is about Church law. This might not be correct, but I am sure that the three answers together say that being in a loving relationship with God is the answer to every question we face.
Secondly is the fact that Deuteronomy talks of giving ones heart, soul and ‘might’ (dunamis). Matthew changes this to ‘mind’ (dianoia). I think this is fascinating. I have been scratching my head and asking why would he make this change?
I don’t know, but in the English translation Matthew has used the word ‘mind’ twice before in this chapter – that the son changed his mind and went to the field, and that the Chief Priests and Elders saw the sinners repent at John the Baptist’s message but still didn’t change their minds. So clearly he wants his listener to change their minds. But Luke and Mark include ‘mind’ but still keep ‘strength’ (ischus), which is close to ‘might’.
My thought – and I am not sure if this is valid – is that Matthew’s gospel is all about a reversal of the existing order: “‘Blessed are the poor in spirit… Blessed are those who mourn… Blessed are the meek…” etc. So he doesn’t want to include the concept of strength in the way we love God. That is, for Matthew we don’t love God out of our strength but out of our weakness!
It is interesting to note the at Jesus’ arrest the three synoptic accounts are very similar except that Matthew adds, “Then Jesus said to him, ‘Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the sword will perish by the sword. Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will at once send me more than twelve legions of angels?” So for Matthew it is God who has the ‘might’, we don’t need it, we simply have to have the mind to turn towards God.
I don’t know if this makes sense, but it is my reading of what Matthew is saying.
One last thing: you wrote, “By calling him Teacher they [the Pharisees] again show false humility as they did when they asked him about paying taxes to Caesar …they thought they already knew it all.” And this is an opening to a piece on “love your neighbour as yourself”? Surely the Pharisees, even if they lived two thousand years ago, are also our neighbours so should be dealt with in a loving way. I think your pastor’s comment “But what impact do the readings have on you?" might be worth some meditation.
But many thanks for sharing your sermon with us, it was appreciated.
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