To read the texts click on the texts:Ex 22:20-26; 1 Thes 1:5-10; Mt 22:34-40
There is an immortal poem written by Englishman,
Leigh Hunt about a man called Abou Ben Adhem. Abou Ben Adhem woke from his
sleep one night and saw in his room an angel writing in a book of gold the
names of those who love God. “And is mine one?” inquired Abou. “Nay, not so,”
replied the angel. “I pray thee, then,” said Abou, “Write me as one who loves
his fellow men and women.” The following night the angel came again and
displayed the names of those who love God. Abou Ben Adhem’s name was on top of
the list.
This poem makes the point that true love of God and true love of our
fellow human beings are like two sides of the same coin. One cannot exist apart
from the other.
That is what we find in today’s gospel in which Jesus is asked
about the greatest commandment in the law. Though he is asked for the greatest
commandment only, in his response Jesus gives what at first glance seem like
two but which are in reality one. True love of God and true love of neighbour is
practically one and the same thing.
Jesus is here reacting against a one-dimensional
understanding of love. For Jesus, true love must express itself in the vertical
and horizontal dimensions. The vertical dimension refers to the love which a
person has for God and the horizontal dimension to that love for God which must
be expressed in love for the other. He even goes so far as to say this is the
summation of the law and prophets, namely the summation of all that has ever
been said by anyone. Thus, the first entails the second, the second presupposes
and depends on the first. In neither case, however, is love construed as an
emotion.
Love for one’s neighbour means acting toward others with their good,
their well-being, their fulfillment, as the primary motivation and goal of our
deeds. Such love is constant and takes no regard of the perceived merit or
worth of the other person.
Love of God, on the other hand, is to be understood
as a matter of reverence, commitment, and obedience. It is at once an
acknowledgement of God’s identity as Creator, Sustainer and Redeemer and a
reflection of that reality in the ordering of our lives. With this orientation
toward God and others, the law and the prophets have reached their ultimate goal.
The first reading from Exodus provides some help
in understanding why these commands are interrelated. Whenever someone is
wronged, hurt or forgotten, God hears their cry. Whenever one
fails to regard the needs of the neighbour, he or she has broken trust with the
God of compassion. After all, the Exodus text reminds the hearers of their own
position as strangers and foreigners. The same God who took compassion on them
when they were in exile now looks to see his own spirit of compassion living on
in them. The God of love first and foremost draws all
people into a loving relationship with himself.
God’s love is also evident in Paul’s earliest
record of his ministry. In his first letter to the Thessalonians, Paul
acknowledges that it takes courage to declare the Gospel in the face of
opposition. This Gospel is about Jesus the tangible expression of God’s
unconditional love. His sole intention in coming to earth was to save people
from their sins by manifesting to them the reality of the unconditional love of
God. This love experienced by them was a love that became visible in their
actions towards their neighbours. The reason for the opposition is because
people prefer to lead selfish and self centered lives rather than have the
courage to live other centered lives like Jesus. Those with advantage tend to
regard the existing order as appropriate.
We live in a world that is quickly being destroyed
by consumerism and greed. It is a world in which to “have more” is more
important than to “be more” and even if this having more is at the cost of
giving less and sometimes nothing to others. It is a world in which we turn our
heads as the rainforests burn and glaciers melt only because we want to live in
bigger houses and drive bigger cars that consume more oil and gas than can be
produced. It is a world that answers the “wants” of a few by destroying more
and more of God’s creation. It is a world in which those with enough and more
clothes for themselves dare to take away their neighbour’s only cloak and leave
him or her naked.
Thus being loving and compassionate involves more
than mere kindness. It is the passion to develop strategies and structures to
lift up those who are down. If our political and economic systems allow the
marginalized to fall between society’s cracks, then we who have been loved into
action by a compassionate God are encouraged to challenge the existing order or
to find ways to alter their predicament. To fail to do this is to lose God in
the chaos of society.
Only when we show this love for neighbor in so
tangible a manner that we can profess to love God.
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