Readings of the day: Sirach 15:15-20; Psalm 119:1-2, 4-5, 17-18, 33-34; 1 Corinthians 2:6-10; Matthew 5:17-37
A “Peanuts” cartoon by Charles Schultz shows Charlie Brown waiting in front of a pretty
girl in line at the school cafeteria. Charlie Brown asks the girl if she wants
to go ahead of him in line. She politely says no. Charlie confides in her: “I’m
always sort of nervous around pretty girls.”
The girl responds, “But you must never feel that way. Pretty girls are
human, too,” to which Charlie, astounded, exclaims, “You are?!”
Yes, of course, pretty girls are human. All of us are human. But what
does it mean to be most fully human?
Our readings today speak to us about what it means to be most fully human.
How many of us are thinking or have thought: Yes, Jesus Christ is fully
human as well as fully divine? The easy answer to how we are most fully human
is to be most like Jesus Christ, but this answer still leaves us with further
questions: How is Jesus most fully
human, and how are we to emulate him if we, too, are to realize our humanity to
its fullest?
Many of us may have heard this: To be human is to be both sacred and social.
Our readings presume that to be human is to be sacred; to be of God and
for God. Sirach says in today’s first reading, “If you choose you can keep the
commandments… If you trust in God, you too shall live.” Our Responsorial Psalm
is a beautiful hymn of praise for God’s law: “Blessed are they who follow the
law of the LORD.” St. Paul writes to the Corinthians about a mysterious
“wisdom” of God that God has “revealed to us through the Spirit” because God
loves us so deeply. Jesus does not “abolish the law or the prophets” that are
for our good, but teaches us how “the law and the prophets” are to be
interpreted in a way worthy of our sacredness as human beings.
God would not call us to obedience to and reverence for God’s law if we,
as human beings, were not sacred; were not created by God; were not loved by
God; were not created to love one another; were not created to be with God
forever. And yet let us also remember that we are also social beings. If this
were not true, God’s commandments and God’s wisdom would mean little to us. We,
as human, are social; meant to live in community with one another and in
communion with God.
Matthew’s Gospel, and especially the Sermon on the Mount from which our
Gospel reading today is drawn, is particularly concerned with what strengthens
community; the social aspect of being human. Jesus’ sayings that we hear today‒ “You have
heard it said… but I say…”‒ would have resonated only if Jesus’ hearers already had (and have) a strong sense
of community; of the human being as social.
To break God’s commandments or to teach that they are unimportant breaks
down human community, and so Jesus reminds us that the commandments that God
has given to us are to be preserved and obeyed in their integrity. But there is
more to living in community than merely keeping commandments and laws to the
letter.
In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus expands on and intensifies the laws of
the Old Testament that are most beneficial to building human community; to our
development toward the fullness of our humanity, both sacred and social. Why,
though, would Jesus expand on and intensify those laws of which we hear today?
Could he not have chosen to teach on less controversial subjects?
I think of what Jesus is doing as promoting moral, spiritual, and social
exercise; an exercise of individual and social conscience. The Olympics in
Sochi are just underway, for those of us who are interested, so perhaps it is
appropriate to speak of exercise. Just as an Olympic athlete enters into
competition with her or his natural talents, but trains often to the point of
at least physical discomfort to improve upon these skills she or he already has,
so Jesus asks us to exercise our natural human inclination to build strong
community.
As sacred and social beings, we know innately the wisdom of God’s
commandments and that they are for our good: “You shall not kill… You shall not
commit adultery… Do not take a false oath.” But how many of us or of people we
know, with full intent or not, make occasional exceptions to these laws or
minimize their significance?
“You shall not kill.” But if I am extremely angry with another, is it
not defensible to let slip a clever insult or curse, or not to forgive that
person immediately, or not to communicate with that person for a time, or maybe
to be passive-aggressive toward the person with whom we are angry? Surely these
actions will not damage human community, will they? The truth is that they do,
even if slowly.
“You shall not commit adultery.” This week, the Church in the U.S. has
celebrated the Week of Marriage. Do we join in celebrating the dignity of
marriage? How often have you and I seen marriage trivialized instead of revered
in our society? How often are the pretty girl, or handsome guy, in the
cafeteria line, in our social places, or at Mass; our wives or husbands or
fiancé(e)s, or our children regarded as human beings to be loved and not things
to be used? The former attitude builds human community; the latter destroys it.
“Do not take a false oath.” While this commandment’s meaning might seem
obvious, how often have we made exceptions to speaking only the truth; to
letting our “‘yes’ mean ‘yes’ and [our] ‘no’ mean ‘no’”?
In a strong human
community as we are and of which I have the joy of being a part here at St. Kateri,
we heed these and other commandments for the good of our community quite well,
I say. But we all need the moral, spiritual, and social exercise that Jesus
offers us. The continued strengthening of our human community depends on it. If
we accept Jesus’ invitation to exercise, even occasionally to the point of
discomfort, we will become more fully human; more like Christ himself.
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