To read the texts click on the texts: Lev 19:1-2,11-18; Mt 25:31-46
The Gospel text of today is a passage about the
"kingdom" of God, about all those who are kin to God, and, therefore,
who are kin to each other. We are each of us kin to one another. We are all
indeed one. The deepest expression of this truth, on this side of life, is a
spirituality in which there is no split between our devotion and our deed; no
split between mystery and commandment; no split between piety and ethics and no
split between being and doing. Like mystery and commandment, interwoven as they
are, Jesus is one with the hungry and the thirsty, is one with the stranger and
the prisoner, and is one with the naked and the sick. To care for these, is to
care for Jesus. To care for them is to reach back into the very essence of life
and to touch the God who takes shape in the hungry, in the thirsty, in the
naked, in the sick, in the stranger, in the prisoner. "And then the king
will answer them, 'Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of
these, who are members of my family, you did it to me.'" The text, thus, is
not so much about the condemnation of God, as it is really about the universal
vision of the love of God, about the very scope of God's love in Jesus for the
whole world. Jesus remains the model of unconditional and eternal love. This
was shown in the most powerful of ways by Jesus himself, when in total
obedience to the Father, he dared to spread his arms on the Cross in total
surrender of self. Therefore, God raised him.
This understanding is important to avoid any kind of
misinterpretation that might arise due to a person thinking that it is his/her
deeds that earn merit and reward. The righteous who reached out to the least of
their brothers and sisters, did so because of the necessity to help, love,
serve, visit and feed. They dared to listen to the promptings of the Spirit and
responded to these promptings. They did not do what they did for reward. It was
not the condition of their good deeds, but its consequences. They did not earn
the kingdom but inherited it. Inheritance is determined by the giver not the
receiver. The kingdom remains a free gift of God.
Though the unrighteousness also address Jesus as Lord
– a title used in Matthew’s Gospel only by those who at least have some faith -
it is not enough. Their address remains at the theoretical level and is not
translated into action. They did not act because they did not believe that God
could hide himself in the poorest of the poor. They did not believe that God
could be present in the scum of society and in those who live on the margins.
They believed that God could be present only in a beautiful sunset or in the
stimulating fragrance of a rose or in the silence of one’s heart. They did not
realize that our God had been made visible in Jesus, who taught all who were
willing to listen, that God was primarily a God of the poor, and that though he
was king, he came only to serve.
The sufferings borne by the least of our brothers and
sisters continue to summon and challenge us as Church today. They continue to
ask us to dare to be credible and authentic witnesses of the Gospel. They
invite us not merely to preach acts of loving kindness but to do them. However,
what we need is not merely more action, more doing for the sake of doing. No!
What we need is a universal unity of love and togetherness. It is a
togetherness that transcends all of our frontiers, the frontiers of our mind
and of our heart, the frontiers of our creeds and doctrines, the frontiers of
our ideas and concepts. This is a radical call to transcend all of those
externals that keep us apart, that keep us separated and split.
The challenge for us today is to forget our own needs
for love and happiness and to reach out in love to make someone else happy who
may be in greater need. For whatever we do to the least of these needy children
of God, these brothers and sisters of Jesus, we do to Jesus Himself.
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