God = Life = Love
Friday:
Eighteenth Week of the Year: August 5, 2016
Year II: Nahum 2:1 to 3:7; Canticle: Deuteronomy
32:35-41; Matthew 16: 24-28
The Responsorial
Psalm asks: “A pure heart create for
me, O God” (Psalm The Responsorial
Verse proclaims God as God: “It is I
who deal death and give life” (Deuteronomy
32; 35-41).
Today only we read Nahum, who prophesies in
[1:15] 2:1 to 3:7 the defeat of Nineveh, who had ravaged Israel: “Look! On
the mountains the feet of one who brings good tidings, who proclaims peace!”
Often God seems to “stand by” and let it happen
when we make war, oppress and violate others. This is because God also stands
by his decision to give people free will. Free is free: to do good or evil, to
heal or hurt. But God has not given up control. In his time and in his way he
moves against evil and he triumphs. No one can really harm those who are
faithful to him. God saves them even in death and destruction. The life God
gives, no one can take from us. God makes that clear: “It is I who deal death and give life.”1
In Matthew
16: 24-28 (and in yesterday’s Gospel) Jesus reveals the true mystery of
life and death, weakness and power. He reveals the mystery of his own unique,
divine and totally unexpected way of saving the world: he is going to win
through defeat, gain life for us by dying, and conquer evil by loving those who
do evil. And anyone who wishes to join him in the mission and ministry of
saving the world must do it on the same terms:
“take up their cross and follow” his example.
We “take up our cross” by accepting whatever suffering falls on our shoulders and loving back. We try to avoid suffering
and to free others from it, but when it comes — as it will in a free and sinful
world — we endure it with love. We
respond with love, not with violence, even to those who would kill us. “For
those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life
for my sake will find it.”
This is the ultimate “crisis” or test of love.
“No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” —
and enemies!2
This is the key to Christ’s way of saving the
world. Peter, in the name of us all, immediately rejected it (see yesterday’s
Gospel). Jesus’ own People (also in the name of us all) rejected him as Messiah
because he calls us to endure suffering with love instead of protecting us from
suffering. Jesus’ remedy for sin in the world is to endure the consequences of
others’ sin and love back. This is
not the kind of Savior we want. But it is the only one there is. To minister
with him we must be “victims in the Victim” as well as “priests in the Priest.”
We “present our bodies as a living sacrifice” to God and the world. “It is God who deals death and give life.”
We give life by accepting death — in every form it takes.3
And we will triumph with him: “For the Son of
Man is to come with his angels in the glory of his Father.” The bottom line is
victory.
Initiative:
Give God’s life: Be priest and victim: Trust in no power but truth and love.
Footnotes:
1Matthew 2:20; 6:25;
18:8; 19:17; Luke 21: 16-19; John 3:16; 5: 18-29; 6: 27-58; 10: 10, 28;
11:25.
2John 15:13.
3Romans 12:1.
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