You shall love God with all your heart, all
your soul,
all your mind and your neighbor as
yourself. The
whole law depends on these.
Matthew 22:34-40
We have been reading about the battle between Jesus and the religious teachers of his day. Since Jesus was very popular among the ordinary people on the streets, these religious leaders could not attack him directly so they resorted to trying to trap him in his speech so that they could have something to accuse him of should there be a heresy or sedition trial.
Last week, they thought that they had Jesus cornered. First, they schmoozed him with false flattery to get him to open up. “Teacher, we know that you are a truthful man and you teach the way of God in accordance with the truth.” They then asked him whether it was lawful to pay taxes to Caesar or not. They thought they had boxed in with a clever “damned if you do and damned if you don’t” dilemma. If he said “yes it is lawful” he would offend and lose his followers who hated Caesar and his taxes, but if he said “no it is not lawful” then the Roman government would come after him for sedition. Jesus outsmarted their trickery by answering, “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s!”
Today they are back for another try. The trick question today is “what is the greatest commandment?” They knew that scripture scholars could not agree on this so they thought they could discredit him with somebody no matter what answer he gave. Again, Jesus outsmarted them by placing the love of God and love of neighbor on the same plane - making them equal - rather than prioritizing them as they requested.
Love God with all my heart, soul mind and strength? Love my neighbor as myself? You mean I am supposed to make God and others the most important considerations in my life, even more than myself? Most of us, to be honest, can’t say that God is that important to us, much less the people around us!
I would love to be able to say that God is always at the center my life, and that I love all people all the time but sadly I quite often put myself and other things ahead of God and the needs of others. Some days I do better than others but, thankfully, God is very patient with me and loves me anyway. I have always taken comfort in knowing that my best is good enough for God.
Today,
I want to say a few more words about taking these two commandments seriously.
None of us will ever measure up completely to the Great Commandment – the one
that summarizes all other commandments - but this is the brass ring for which
we all reach. To take God seriously, to seek to love him and others with all we
have, there are things we must do. I can think of six.
1. We must want what God wants. To be able to even want
what God wants, we have to know what God wants. That means we have to understand
the Scriptures, listen to the Holy Spirit and stay consciously connected to God
through prayer.
2. We must remember who we are. We are holy. We
are holy, not because of what we have done, but because we are “created in the
image and likeness of God” and, through our baptism, we are adopted children of
God. We must accept our holiness, loving ourselves if you will, neither
exaggerating who we really are nor denying who we really are!
3. We must want to live by the same values that Jesus lived
by: having a loving kindness toward all, especially the most weak and
vulnerable, even our enemies; striving to do God’s will no matter the
consequences; using Jesus’ life as a pattern for our own lives.
4. Loving ourselves does not mean pampering ourselves and
giving into our worst inclinations. No, we must be in command of ourselves,
have a handle our addictions and our passions, so that we can steer ourselves in
the way that God wants us to go. We must constantly question our own motives,
making sure that we not only do the right thing, but also do it for the right
reason.
5. We must never give into hopelessness, whether it is
about the future or about other people because we know that the war against
evil has already been won, even
though we may continue to lose many more painful battles. God’s kingdom will
come and nothing we do, not even the gates of hell, can stop it from becoming
a reality!
6. Regardless of our failures, loving God and each other with
our whole heart, soul, and mind is something we should strive for, even though
it is something we will never accomplish completely. God wants a relationship
with us, even if it is rocky and imperfect.
Today, we are challenged to get serious about God, not in some loud, noisy and superficial way, but in a long haul and to the core-of-one’s-being kind of way. Loving God and one’s neighbors with all our hearts, souls and minds does not translate into noisy religious fanaticism, but into a subtle way of living that draws people attention away from themselves and place it on God and those around them. That is the spirit of these two commandments and that is what the spirit of the whole law is all about! How can we possible do all this? We can do it only with God’s help! Let us now go to this table to be fed and strengthened on the Body and Blood of Christ! With God’s help all things are possible!
Last
of all, remember this! If you love God with all your heart, you can do nothing
else BUT do the loving thing to your neighbor and to yourself! If you
are disrespecting yourself and anybody around you, you simply CANNOT claim to
love God! It’s that simple and that profound!
At
a time when meanness to others in the name of God is so intense, it might be
good to remember this, the greatest, commandment. Even loveless religious people, as Jesus knew, can be “wolves in sheep’s clothing.” Blaise Paschal put
it so well. “Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it
from religious conviction.”
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