Homily Thirtieth Sunday of Year
A: Michael Ufok Udoekpo
·
Exod 22:20-26;· Ps 18:2-3, 3-4, 47, 51;
· 1 Thess 1:5c-10
· Matt 22: 34-40
We
are called to Share God’s Love with others!
Throughout
Matthew’s Gospel, chapter 22 Jesus engages in a series of debate with the local
leaders, the Pharisees and the Sadducees, regarding many practical, legal and
faith issues. They keep challenging Jesus. Lasts few Sundays the issues
were that of preparedness for the kingdom of God and civil responsibility.
Should we pay taxes or not. If we do, to whom? Should we honor God or not? If
we do, why and how? Today the Pharisees wants to know which is more important,
the love of God or the love neighbor (Matt 22:34-40). How do we express our
love for God? Through sacrifices, burnt offerings? Or charity? Christ did
not waste time in reminding the Pharisee that, this is an old tension.
Both are important: the love of God and the love of neighbor as oneself.
For
Christ, the whole Law, the Torah, from Genesis to the Book of Deuteronomy, as
well as the entire prophetic books, that essentially stress true worship,
holiness of life, social justice, obedience to God’s words and covenant depend
on these two- dimensional principles of the love of God and the love of our
neighbors. They are not contradictory to each other.
In fact,
those that today’s first reading from the Book of Exodus (22:20-26) was first
addressed to, must have been struggling with this same very tension. How
should we worship God? How should I remain holy, since the Lord our God is holy
(Lev 19:2)? Are animal sacrifices, burnt offerings, pilgrimages to shrines
enough (Amos 5, Hos 6)? Based on this first reading, the answer seems to
be no. Worship of God, holiness of life, justice can as well be expressed by
not molesting foreigners, and by not oppressing the widows and the orphans, and
by refraining from extortion, all in the name of giving loans to the poor
This is also
at the heart of our daily experiences today in the Church and even in the
society as a whole. How to interpret or live the relationship between these two
commandments is a burning issue today. Some of us today will interpret or measure
our holiness of life on the parameter of how much volume of prayer we have said
or how many decades of rosary we prayed yesterday, or even by how many times we
have gone to confession or received Holy Communion in a year. Or how well
ironed is our robe! Based on Jesus response to the Pharisees, that takes
us back to the Pentateuch and the Prophets these are important. But we must
balance this up with the message of the first reading, reaching out to our
neighbors, especially the poor, orphans, widows, the voiceless and the
immigrants of our times. We ought to respect one another, pray for one another,
those in war torn area, and practically help the sick and the needy.
The
point here is that, the two loves are important. This is what Pope Francis so
far has spent his papacy emphasizing; reaching out to those in the margins;
spiritually, emotionally, psychologically, socially, economically, politically,
and physically, where we can.
Many of us
also do this every day. We pray. We also support charitable organizations,
catholic charity, saint Vincent the Paul' society, visit to the sick and the
elderly, good working relationship with fellow workers, being kind and reaching
out to our friends and people around us with positive gestures and healthy eye
contacts. We must keep this up or continue to improve on them!
People,
who pretend to be Christians or seek God while they have no sincere political,
medical, educational, social, economic and spiritual interests or well-beings
of their neighbors of all colors, genders and cultures, at heart, are
hypocrites. They will not find the God of the Bible and of the Law and the
Prophets. We are called to share God’s love with others!