Feb 4, 2023

Making a Difference (5th Sunday Ordinary A)

The American poet, essayist, and transcendentalist philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson believed that making a difference in life is the essential point of living. “The purpose of life,” according to him, “is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” 

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As followers of Christ too, making a difference for the world is our essential calling. It is our life-mission. Jesus, in today’s gospel reading (Mt 5: 13-16), explains to his followers what he expects of them.  By way of images, He instructs them about their life-mission: “You are the salt of the earth… You are the light of the world” (v. 13-14). Let us reflect on each of these images—salt and light—and draw the implications each has on our Christian life.

“You are the salt of the earth.” Salt had two important uses in the ancient world: it gave flavor to food, and it also preserved food. They didn’t have “magic sarap” then or any other ready-made seasoning. They didn't have refrigerators either, so they would preserve meat by putting a thin layer of salt over it. So by implication, we understand that “to be the salt of the earth” means two things for us: First, just as salt gives flavor to food, so are we to bring “flavor” or meaning or to point out what brings lasting joy to the lives of people around us.  Second, just as salt preserves food from decay, so Christ’s followers are called to preserve the society from corruption and moral decadence.

Wherever we are, our presence has to make a difference.  We cannot afford to be Christ’s followers and, at the same time, be just among the others living la vida loca, the kind of life this world dictates.  If this absorption into the worldly value system happens, our Christian life becomes a tasteless salt.  Jesus’ warning is loud and clear regarding this possible sad state: “But if salt loses its taste, with what can it be seasoned? It is no longer good for anything but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot” (Mt 5:13).  Ouch!  A Christian life that does not bring any difference into the world is useless so to speak.

More often than not, the calling to be the salt of the earth demands a Christian living that is counter-cultural.  Serious Christians cannot live by the old political adage that says, “If you can’t lick ‘em, join ‘em. “ Christians do not live by what is popular; their lives instead testify to what truly brings joy and moral uprightness which the world oftentimes ignores.  Christians, as salt of the earth, live with joy in simplicity and deep spiritual relationship with others and God amid the dominant materialistic trends. Christians testify by their lives that there is true joy in purity of mind and heart, in self-respect, in fidelity to a committed loving relationship, and in family life despite the pervasive pleasure-seeking sexual revolution that has raised generations who are afraid of responsibility and commitment. Christians uphold the sacred value of life and the dignity of every person against the world’s culture of death that discards as liabilities the poor, the defenseless fetus, the unproductive sick and aged.

Be the salt of the earth: Make a difference in the world by the way you live—as witness to the values of Christ.

“You are the light of the world.”  Light had the same function then as it does now:  to push back the darkness. But in the ancient world, before the advent of electricity, darkness was a much more dramatic reality than it is to us. The ancients, unlike us today, understood how helpless they were without a lamp.  Hence, it was unthinkable to light a lamp and hide it under a bushel basket.  A lamp had to be set on a stand to give light to all.

Darkness has always been equated with sin and the absence of God. It is light that dispels darkness; light represents the saving grace and presence of God.  To be the light of the world means that the disciples are to manifest by their good works the saving grace and presence of God in the world. “Your light must shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father” (Mt 5: 16). Our good works manifest to the world the compassionate and loving God who is within us.  In our good deeds, God is glorified.

The first reading (Is 58:7-10) recounts how Isaiah reminded the people of Israel who just resettled from exile to give primacy to works of charity over the empty religious rituals of fasting.  Isaiah counseled them to share food to the hungry, shelter to the homeless, clothes to the naked, and assistance to those in need.  Today, Christians are called to commit to the works of justice, charity, peace, and the integrity of creation.  Again, we cannot afford to hide in the sacristy or in the air-conditioned adoration chapel. While prayer and contemplation is essential to our Christian life, it ought to lead us all the more to the loving service of the needy.  Otherwise, we might end up like a burning lamp hidden under a bushel basket.

Be the light of the world: Make a difference in this world darkened by sin. Let your good deeds proclaim the goodness of God. “Then your light shall break forth like the dawn” (Is. 58: 8).







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