Readings for 7th Sunday in Ordinary Time: LV 19: 1-2, 17-18; PS 103: 1-4, 8, 10, 12-13; I COR 3: 16-23; MT 5: 38-48.
Like so many of you, I find it increasingly discouraging to read the daily news -- and even more so to watch the shouting matches that pass for news coverage on television. The Koch brothers and the extreme right are on the ascendency. The disastrous Citizens United decision along with congressional gerrymandering, fraudulent voting machines, and voter suppression have all but insured that such ascendency will continue to the extreme detriment of democracy itself.
Where is the hope in all of this?
Where money is equated with free speech, where corporations are treated like persons [except they're never put in jail (or dissolved) for breaking the law], where the powerful (like James Clapper) are immune from perjury charges (though they admit lying under oath), but those who tell the truth (like Edward Snowden) are identified as "enemies of the state," where's the hope?
How avoid despair in a country where those responsible for war crimes (like Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney) brag about their crimes publicly and are rewarded on the lecture circuit, or where a head of state like George Bush commits what the UN terms "the ultimate war crime" (waging a war of aggression) and avoids prosecution?
Two things: (1) remember history and (2) be awake to history's moral leaders manifesting themselves around us today. Just recalling the names associated with "lost causes" that ended up winning is inspiring. The short list includes Sojourner Truth, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mohandas Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King. . . .
Their counterparts today? How about Amy Goodman, Noam Chomsky, Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Pope Francis I. . . . ?
Of these, Pope Francis, it seems, holds the most hope for believers -- and for the world. He is the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics. And when he says, "Never again war! War never again!" Catholics must take his words into account whether they agree or not. Even non-Catholics must do so because of the pope's stature, and because his uncompromising anti-war stance calls into question what Paul identifies in today's second reading as "the wisdom of the world" -- the inevitability of war.
In fact, today's readings all steer us away from such worldly wisdom. They point us instead toward the biblical tradition which understands God not as the vengeful warrior of competing biblical traditions, but as merciful and compassionate. As today's Gospel reading reminds us, that merciful and compassionate understanding (and not its biblical opposite) was the understanding Jesus embraced. It's the basis of his commandment that his followers' way of life should mirror the perfection of God. It's the foundation of the indiscriminate love of neighbor and of the Christian pacifism that Pope Francis so courageously embodies.
To begin with, in today's Gospel, Jesus takes pains to distinguish between the Bible's warlike vengeful God and its Compassionate One. Jesus specifically rejects the one and endorses the other. For Matthew that rejection and endorsement was momentous -- as significant as Moses' reception of the Ten Commandments from his God, Yahweh. That's why Matthew [in contrast to Luke's equivalent "Sermon on the Plain" (LK 6:17-49)] has Jesus deliver his "sermon" on a mountain (5:1-7:27). The evangelist is implicitly comparing Moses on Mt. Sinai and Jesus on "the Mount."
In any case, through a series of antitheses ("You have heard . .. but I say to you . . ."), Jesus contrasts his understanding of the Law with more traditional interpretations. The Mosaic Law demanded an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, but Jesus' Law commands:
" Turning the other cheek
" Going the extra mile
" Generosity with adversaries
" Open-handedness to beggars
" Lending without charging interest
" Love of enemies
Matthew concludes that if we want to be followers of Jesus, we must also be merciful and compassionate ourselves. As the reading from Leviticus says, we are called to be holy as God is holy. Or as Jesus puts it, perfect as God is perfect.
And how perfect is that? It's the perfection of nature, where the sun shines on good and bad alike -- where rain falls on all fields regardless of who owns them. It's the perfection of the God described in this morning's responsorial. According to the psalmist, the Divine One pardons all, placing an infinite distance ("as far as east is from west") between sinners and their guilt. God heals all ills and as a loving parent is the very source of human goodness and compassion. That's the perfection that Jesus' followers are called to emulate.
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