March 11, 2017
Saturday, Lent Week One
Love, Don't Kill, Your Enemies
The Responsorial (Psalm 119 ) asserts the blessing of
discipleship: “Happy are they who follow
the law of the Lord.”
Deuteronomy
26: 16-19: A principle of American jurisprudence is: “Ignorance of the law
is no excuse.” For Christians, knowledge of God’s law is a commitment.
Moses told the People, “Today you are making this agreement with
the Lord: he is to be your God and you are to walk in his ways,” observing all
of God’s “statutes, commandments and decrees.”
Obviously, we can’t live by all of God’s principles and ideals if
we don’t know what they are. And there is too much to learn overnight. Or over
a lifetime. If it were just a matter of “statutes, commandments and decrees,”
we could learn them in one course in Canon Law! But the point of the Covenant
is to absorb God’s mind and heart so completely through reflection on his words
and wonders that we will “love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul and
mind.” For this the Liturgy of the Word
invites us to become disciples.
There is more. The People are agreeing to live in a way that shows
them to be “a people peculiarly his own.” “Peculiarly” just means “especially,”
but the word makes a point: Any group of people who live by the ideals and
principles God teaches will, in fact, seem “peculiar” to the unenlightened.
Jesus calls his disciples to a radical peculiarity.
In Matthew 5: 43-48
Jesus zooms in on the “scandalous commandment,” the one that drew instant
protest out of Peter.[1]
“Love your enemies, pray for your persecutors.” This just isn’t human. Every
soldier we put in the field and every bomb we drop declares we would all as a
nation rather kill our enemies than be killed loving them.
There is no escaping Jesus’ meaning. He declares categorically,
“If any want to become my followers, let them... take up their cross and follow
me. Those who want to save their life will lose it. Those who lose their life
for my sake will find it.” But we prefer to save our lives by killing our
enemies (perhaps sending them to Hell, since they are presumably the “bad
guys”) rather than let them send us to heaven by giving up our lives in love as
Jesus did on the cross. How “peculiar” can you get?
This is exactly what makes Jesus’ point when he says, “This will prove you are children of your
heavenly Father….” Anybody who loves, not as humans do, but as God alone does,
must be doing so by sharing in God’s divine life. It is above all by observing
this commandment, treating every man and woman on earth as our brother or
sister, that we reveal ourselves as the mystery of Christ’s risen body on
earth, children of God the Father,.
Obviously, it takes a lot of discipleship to grow into this one.
Initiative:
Don’t give up. To love like God is a graduate course. Keep at it.
[1] See Matthew 16:21-28. The basic principle
here is that we love others, even enemies, enough to let them kill us rather
than do them harm. This is just as shocking to us as it was to the first
disciples.
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