Make Your Goal To Be Whole
Monday:
Fifteenth Week of the Year: July 11, 2016
Year II:
Isaiah 1:10-17; Psalm 50:8-23; Matthew
10:34 to 11:1
The Responsorial
Psalm tells us that our aim in religion and ministry must be first to so
live that we will see and understand the mystery of God. “To the upright I will show the saving power of God” (Psalm 50).
Last Saturday’s reading was a “flashback” to the
vision that sent Isaiah to prophesy. Now in Isaiah 1: 10-17 he begins his message by calling Israel (and us) to
“lay the ax to the root of the tree” (Matthew 3:10) — to re-examine the root of
our religious observance, the goal
that gives direction, meaning and value to all we do: “Cease doing evil; learn
to do good. Make justice your aim!”
We can perform religious acts aimlessly, just
doing them because we are supposed to, without any goal in mind except obedient
conformity. And in our ministry to one another we can stop short here. We can
encourage our children and each other to “go to Mass” without teaching them (or
asking ourselves) why the Church
calls us there, or what our goal, our
focus, should be while we are participating in the Eucharist. Then we are “just
there,” “fulfilling our obligation,” and God says to us through Isaiah, “What
care I for the number of your sacrifices?… Trample my courts no more!”
It is true that in itself the Mass always has
the value of the offering Jesus made on the cross, since it is the same
offering made present. But its value to
us is greater or lesser in proportion to our active participation in the
celebration. If we don’t know what we are supposed to be doing at Mass, and do
not try to do it, Mass will be a “dead” experience for us, and we will make it
deadly for others. So Isaiah urges us, “Listen
to the instruction of our God…. learn
to do good. Make justice your aim.”
In Matthew
10:34 to 11:1 Jesus acknowledges that his ministry can be upsetting: “Do
not suppose that my mission on earth is to spread peace, but division!” Jesus
came to call us into “crisis,” to make us choose, not just between good and
bad, but between the good and the perfect. And we must allow nothing to compete
with that: not family, not life itself. He calls us to “lose our lives” on the level
of the ordinary human fulfillment that might be our goal now and to aim instead
at “life to the full” (John 10:10). In all our religious observances and all
our ministries to others we need to be intent on “dying” to our accepted and
acceptable level of life in order to live on the level of God. For us, to live
is to live in graced union with Jesus Christ. To water down the Gospel is to
pollute the water of Baptism, whose saving power is seen only by those who aim
at “life to the full.”
We must ignore fear. If we live as Christ we
will receive the reward of Christ when he comes in triumph and glory. “To the upright I will show the saving power
of God."
Initiative:
Give God’s life: Be a “priest in the Priest.” Embody “life to the full” and share it.
Good post.
ReplyDelete