You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.You shall love your neighbor as yourself.
Mt 22:34-40
Click to go to << 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time (A) 2011 >>
Click to go to << 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time (A) 2008 >>
What is the greatest commandment? That
question seems strange. But it becomes understandable when we realize that that
there were at least 613 rules that were developed to implement the Law of
Moses. It’s like today’s legal system. When the legislature makes a bill and
the President signs it into law, there is the still need of making what is
called IRR or implementing rules and regulations. Now some rabbis taught that
all of them were of equal importance while others say that some were more
important than the others. The question put to Jesus (what is the greatest
commandment) was meant to ask Jesus to which side he belongs: to those who say
all are of equal importance or to those who say some are more important than
the others?
Jesus replied that the greatest commandment
was the Law of love: to love God AND to love one’s neighbor. Both
have to be obeyed. Moreover, he said that it is from this Law of love that all
the other rules flow. In other words, all the other rules were just ways of practicing
the Law of love in daily life.
PHARISEES. The Pharisees were the ones who
posed this question to Jesus. The name “Pharisee” means “separated”. They were
separated from others by their strict observance of the Law of God. It was a
way of expressing their fidelity to God. They were held in high esteem by the
people because they were hard working and yet found the time to study and
meditate on God’s Law. But if there was one great defect of the Pharisees, it
was not hypocrisy but their great reliance on what they do for God than
on God himself. In other words, they were BSS (mga bilib sa sarili). Perhaps,
we can imitate the work ethic of the Pharisees. We can call it “sipag at tiyaga”.
NEIGHBOR. In Old Testament times, neighbor
was understood as the one who belongs to my family, or my clan, or my people. In
the parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus tells us to widen our understanding of
neighbor. Anyone who needs my help, even if he were an enemy, is my neighbor.
And as a Christian, it is my duty to be a neighbor to him. I have to help him.
We have heard the expression, “charity
begins at home”. There is nothing wrong with that. But charity should not end
at home. It must expand outside the home. For example, an alumnus treated to
coffee at Starbucks in Sydney. At the counter, I was pleasantly surprised to
read this sign: “We have already forwarded your donations for the victims of Haiyan.”
Haiyan was the international name for typhoon, “Yolanda”. Australia is so far
from the Philippines, yet these Australians behaved like our neighbors.
LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF. When Jesus
said: “"You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your 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 neighbor as yourself”, what he
meant was that loving one’s neighbor is as important as loving God.
“Love your neighbor as yourself” has an
important implication. We can rephrase it this way: “Love your neighbor as you love
yourself.” That means that loving oneself is alright. What is wrong is
to love only oneself. Charity begins at home is alright. What is wrong
is for charity to begin and end at home.
Another important point. Jesus did not say
that our love for our neighbor and our love for ourselves should be equal.
What he said was that we should love them in the same way that we love
ourselves. You do good to yourself; you should also do good to others. You don’t
want bad things to happen to yourself; you also do not wish bad things to
happen to others.
Maybe I should add a small note. The Tagalog
translation of “Love your neighbor as yourself” is “Ibigin mo ang iyong kapwa
gaya ng pag-ibig mo sa iyong sarili.” Neighbor is not kapit-bahay but kapwa
tao. Nevertheless, let us remember that when we said that charity
begins at home but should not end there, the nearest people to receive our
charity outside our home is--our kapit-bahay! Remember further
the question posed by Jesus at the end of the parable of the Good Samaritan: “Which
of these three do you think was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands
of robbers?” We can re-phrase it this way: “Which of these three behaved
like a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of robbers?” Applying this
teaching of Jesus to what he said about loving your neighbor as yourself, it will
come out like this: “Love your kapit-bahay as yourself by
behaving like a good kapit-bahay to them.”
The Cross is the symbol of Christianity.
The first reason is that Jesus redeemed us by dying on the cross. But maybe we
add a second reason. The vertical bar represents love of God. The horizontal
bar represents love of neighbor. The cross cannot be a cross if the vertical bar
and horizontal bar are separated. They have to be together. The second reason
why the cross is a symbol of Christianity is because Jesus gave us the law of
love: love God AND love your neighbor. That is the way Christians love.
No comments:
Post a Comment