Homily Thirtieth Sunday Year A Keep it simple. Just love
Homily:
Thirtieth Sunday Year A
Reading
1: Last Sunday, we heard: “I am the Lord, your God. There is no other God
besides me.” It was in this context that God revealed the Ten Commandments to
his people, the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The first three deal
with our relationship with God directly. The other seven deal with our
relationship with one another, especially the most vulnerable: aliens, widows,
orphans, the poor and the needy. We are not to oppress, wrong, abuse or take
advantage of those who are the most vulnerable in society.
We
are to hear the cry of these people in their need. Because of our relationship
with God we are to do all we can to help them. Why? God has shown his mercy and
love to us.
God
reminded the Israelites that they were once aliens, enslaved in a foreign land.
God heard their cry and delivered them through mighty signs and wonders. When the shoe is on the other foot how
quickly they and we forget our own past. Who is God to you? What has God done for
you? What does God ask of you?
Gospel:
How did Jesus silenced the Sadducees? They had tried to trick and discredit
Jesus concerning the resurrection from the dead, which they did not believe.
Jesus turned the tables against them and showed them the absurdity of their
thinking.
Now
the Pharisees wanted to trap and discredit Jesus. Besides the Ten Commandments,
over the centuries the religious leaders had burdened the people by imposing
more than over 600 precepts. If they wanted to be righteous, the people had to
keep all these precepts exactly.
When
asked what was the greatest commandment, Jesus, who knew the Scriptures, sums
up the Ten Commandments into two. Love God with your whole heart and love your
neighbor. Jesus, as a faithful Jew, knew
and recited the great Schema several times during the day, keeping before him
his relationship with God. “Hear, O Israel, the Lord alone is God. You shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind and strength and your neighbor
as you love yourself.”
This
is the response Jesus give the Pharisees. In another Gospel, Jesus concludes:
“Do this and you shall have eternal life.” Basically, Jesus was reminding them
to keep first things first.
Our
relationship with God can be simple or complicated by us. Everything boils down
to our love God and our love of all others.
Why am I doing or saying what I am doing or saying? Is it out of a
motive of love of God and love of others? That is the basic message of Jesus.
Do everything out of true love. Doesn’t Jesus indicate one of the basic
measurement that God will use at our judgment is love. “What you do to the least, you do to me.”
Reading
2: Paul continues his letter to the Thessalonians. Last Sunday, Paul praised
them for receiving the word he preached as truth, because they were convicted
by the Holy Spirit. Paul acted out of
love in reaching out to them. They in turned acted out of love in their
response. Here he expressed it by saying: “You became imitators of us and of
the Lord, becoming a model for all believers.” They acted in love, because they
were waiting the return of the Lord.
The
way to simplify our complicated lives is to choose to love God and our neighbor
in all that we do.
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