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Saturday, October 25, 2014

STANDARD OF LOVING

    


 30TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME - A
   
        God expressed his love to Israel through the Covenant and the essence of the Covenant between God and Israel is expressed through the Ten Commandments. To ensure that the Israelites should follow them, the Pharisees multiplied the commandments into 613 positive and negative laws. There were too many of them to follow and because they were confusing they became a burden for the people.

      Jesus’ answer to the question “Which is the greatest commandment” is a quotation from two passages in the Old Testament:
1) Dt. 6:5 as the greatest commandment “You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart, with your whole soul and with your whole mind.”  It is called the “Shemah Israel" (Listen Israel).
2) Lev. 19:18 as the second greatest commandment “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
         Although they were quotations from the Old Testament, Jesus introduced something new:  First, the hinge and the definite meaning of any commandment is Love!  Second, Jesus put the two commandments together as an inseparable unity. 
          Why do we have to love God? Because God is love and he has loved us first.  God translates this divine love through our human experience of being loved.  Under normal circumstances, all of us are the fruits of the overflowing love between our father and mother.  From the moment of our conception until birth we have experienced this magnificent love most especially from our mothers.  During our childhood and our growing years, we were the recipients of love from people around us like our families and friends.
Why do we have to love others as our self?  Simply because God loves them as he loves us.  1 Jn. 4:20 reminds us that if we say we love God but we hate our brother, we are liars!  Because if we cannot love our brother whom we can see, then how can we love God whom we cannot see?  In romantic love, we fall in love with the other person because we feel attracted to his/her goodness or good qualities.  It is the magnet of love that draws us to the other person.  In our love to our parents, siblings, friends and even to humanity, it is the goodness in us that overflows and seeks to be shared.  This is called charity which is love in action.  St. Paul reminds that there are three things that will last: faith, hope, charity and the greatest of these is charity (1 Cor 13:13).  He also reminds us of the futility of things without love. “If can speak the tongues of angels, have all the prophetic knowledge, give all my possessions, but do not have love, I gain nothing…” (1Cor 1:1-3).
The new commandment of love by Jesus became the standard of Christian love!  If we cannot see Jesus and love him in others most especially amongst the poorest, the marginalised, the oppressed, the homeless and the least, neither can we see and love God in heaven!

          

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