Sunday, October 23, 2011

WHICH is the GREATEST?

Do you ever feel overwhelmed with all of the information that is coming to you through the cable news networks, or the all news radio programs, or newspapers and magazines, or the biggest one of all - the internet? It is a lot to try to take in. It really can be too much.

A man named Jack Dorsey had an interesting idea - cut through all of the information and get right to the point. So he decided that if you want to communicate something on the internet you had to say it in 140 characters or less. He made an allowance that if a person reading the short statement wanted to know more about the information you could follow a link, a pathway to a further explanation. But Dorsey's key point was short and to the point. Thus twitter was born.




I think Jesus was way ahead of his time, way ahead of twitter. In yet another challenge from the leaders of his time a scholar of the law tested Jesus by asking,

"Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?"

Now there were over 600 laws, that's a lot of information, and Jesus was asked to pick one. Impossible, this was yet another impossible request from the leaders of the time.  YET, in a twitter kind of way, a short and to the point response,  Jesus responds:

"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.
The second is like it:
You shall love your neighbor as yourself.
The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments."

Jesus gets right to the point, he identifies the greatest commandment - it is all about LOVE. Jesus combines the great Shema, a prayer that devout Jews recited every morning and night. A prayer that was a command to love God absolutely, a prayer that was to be written on their very hearts. He combined that prayer with a  familiar passage from Leviticus -

You must love your neighbor as yourself”.

Now Jesus, mind you, was not asked for two great laws, but he gave two as one. The entire will of God and purpose of our life is to love God with our whole being and our neighbors as ourselves. Jesus understood the interlocking of the two commandments in a new and quite radical way.

You cannot have one without the other.

Without the love of neighbor, the love of God remains a barren emotion; and without the love of God, love of neighbor is but a refined form of self-love. The combined command teaches us to strive for humility before our gracious God and obedient service to others, especially the poor.

Loving our neighbor means more than being kind to our friends and relatives, or to the person who lives next door.

Loving one’s neighbor means:

doing right by any widow or orphan
seeing that the hungry are fed and the homeless sheltered
that the poor have their basic needs met
that the unemployed do not suffer from want
that the young are educated and the old are cared for.

To do less is to fail in our love for neighbor.

To do less is also to keep us from fully loving our all-loving God.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Who Do We Belong To?

As I put my Phillies jerseys away I thought of the last game that I attended. It was the first playoff game. There were over 45,000 red clad, towel waving screaming fans. But entering our row and sitting right next to us was a lone Cardinal fan complete with hat and jersey. He admitted that he was a bit intimidated but confessed that he was a committed fan. The Phillies didn't make it easy for that fellow but he never wavered. He never gave up. He stayed to the very end.

Jesus said to them, "Whose image is this and whose inscription?"
They replied, "Caesar's."
At that he said to them,
"Then repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar
and to God what belongs to God."

Isn't Jesus asking us this question ... Who do we belong to?

In the baseball world, my answer to the question would be ...
I belong to the Phillies.

BUT ... would I have the same enthusiasm if I were like that Cardinals fan and I was all alone in a hostile stadium. Would I still boldly say ...
I belong to the Phillies.

Jesus isn't talking to u about baseball. He wants to know about our hearts and He asks each of us ... Who do we belong to?

The answer is clear ... You and I are made in the image and likeness of God. Therefore, the good news is
WE BELONG TO GOD!

Gathering in Church on Sundays we are surrounded by others who share in our belief and understanding that we are sons and daughters of God. Through the Word of God proclaimed we learn what it means to belong to God. And by receiving His gift of love in the Eucharist we are empowered to live as members of the family of God. This experience helps to re-enforce the truth that
WE BELONG TO GOD.   

But the challenge is living this truth throughout the week in all the various situations we find ourselves in.

FAMILY GATHERINGS ... inevitably Uncle Joe starts in on the Catholic Church ... on and on he goes criticizing everything ... what do we do?

WORK ... we notice one person after the other slacking off, taking longer breaks and still paid the same... what do we do?

FRIENDS ... watching a game and the next thing you know it becomes jokes and story time. The problem is the jokes are off-color ... what do we do?

And on and on ... It is in these everyday situations that we can start feeling like that isolated Cardinals' fan at the ballpark. We can and will be tempted to hide who we really belong to.

What we need to realize that in these everyday situations we are never alone. Jesus promised us that the Holy Spirit would be with us to lead us and to guide us. In the midst of these tough situations we need to turn and ask the Holy Spirit for help. A short prayer nothing dramatic but with an openness that God is with us and will show us the way. That the Holy Spirit will enable us to live out each and every day the answer to the question ...
Who do we belong to?

With confidence and enthusiasm - Home or Away - we can enthusiastically proclaim through our words and our actions ...

WE BELONG TO GOD.