Oct 28, 2023

A Disturbing Commandment (30th Sunday Ordinary A)


It is so easy to spiritualize concrete social problems like hunger and poverty by doing nothing about them except to pray for those who are suffering.  That is why many of us can be misled to believe that to fulfil our Christian obligation it is enough to express our love of God by our devotional piety.  We make sure that we go to Church for our prayers, devotions, and religious observance. 

Loving God by way of our pious activities is of itself praiseworthy as long as this does not lead us to spiritual escapism—meaning, the tendency to withdraw from the hard realities of life and seek easy solutions in devotional spiritual practices.  When we are confronted with the real needs of our poor neighbours and we offer no commitment in helping them in whatever way we can, our prayers may be a form of escape from the inconveniences of offering concrete and helpful solutions, our devotional piety may actually be devoid of authentic love of God.

Others may move towards the opposite direction.  They may be so consumed by the horror of human suffering that they commit their whole life in the service of the suffering neighbours and altogether forget about God.  Therefore, no more need for prayer or going to Church. This is the pitfall of activism. This happens when our love of neighbour does not stem from our love of God.

Today’s gospel (Mt. 22: 34-40) presents to us the two greatest commandments and allows us to see that the indissolubility of their essential connection is the foundation of an authentic Christian moral life. “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all you heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the first commandment. The second is like it: You shall love your neighbour as yourself” (vv. 37-39).

Love of God and love of neighbour have to be seen as intersecting demands of love lest we fall into the traps of spiritual escapism, on the one hand, and of activism, on the other.  The Catechism for Filipino Catholics explains this interactive relationship between these two commandments of love in three levels:

As Christians, then, we know, first, that our genuine human love is a participation in God’s love. “Love consists in this, not that we have loved God, but that He has loved us” (1 Jn 4:10). Second, through Christ and the Spirit, God is really present in both our neighbour’s and our very own loving. “If we love one another, God dwells in us and His love is brought to perfection in us” (1 Jn 4:12). Thus, our love for our neighbour contains within it a direct orientation to God. Third, our explicit love of God clearly brings out our deepest love of neighbour (CFC, par. 944).

Hence, one is a liar when he claims to love God whom he cannot see and not love his fellow whom he can see.  

Once, I was heading on foot to a chapel in Marikina to celebrate an anticipated mass as a guest priest. It was almost dark. While passing by a food chain, I smelt something repulsively foul as I saw the garbage was being scavenged by what I thought were dogs.  I was taken aback when I realized that they were not dogs. I saw a man, a woman and a child eating the left over thrown into the garbage.  The picture of a family having dinner in that garbage with its stomach-turning stench would haunt me until now. That evening while the community who invited me was celebrating Eucharist in praise of God’s name, a family was trying to survive by eating the community’s refuse. During the homily, I made mention of what I saw and how I was tremendously disturbed. How can we profess love of God as a community when all at the same time we just accept as a matter of fact a family to be reduced to such subhuman living conditions? The chapel was very silent. Probably we were all disturbed.

I realized today’s gospel is actually disturbing.  The commandment of love disturbs our otherwise complacent life.  Love, after all, is inherently disturbing.  When we commit to respond to God’s love, we find ourselves challenged to reach out not only to God but to those who need our love badly.

I was not bound to stay with the community for I was a passing guest priest.  But, at the least, I was able to share my feeling of disturbance.  The community ought to be disturbed so that the love they have for God may become the very force that propels them to respond to the hunger of their neighbours.

We all individually seem to be helpless in front of the magnitude of the call to love our neighbour.  But again, we can and we ought to face the challenge of loving our neighbours as communities.  This is the value of forming organizations.  Our religious organizations ought to empower each of us to respond to the challenge of loving—that through the love of God shared together by all members, they may have the collective means to respond to the neighbours’ evident hunger for love.

Love of God and love of neighbour are at the heart of our Christian moral life. If we take them separately and unrelated to each other we end up impoverishing the power of love.  Love becomes lame, unable to respond to the challenge of authentic change in our communities. But taken together, they make for the most disturbing principle that propels all Christians to live according to the vision of the God of love.

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