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4 minute read
SEVENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME: LOVE THAT HEALS AND RESTORES
SEVENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
LOVE THAT HEALS AND RESTORES
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Matthew 5:38-48 Celebrated on 19 February 2023 But… such a small word, yet packed was so much power. Jesus uses this power today to raise our eyes from our navel-gazing to a higher level of that new horizon within the Kingdom of God. Here we are shown the true nature of God, our own nature of God within, God with us, and the nature of all creation down to the smallest quark and lepton.
But… Jesus has also looked into the darkness of the abyss and understands the true nature of evil and warns us in the most direct, the starkest terms, that we must not give our shared power of creation to any evil. Jesus is not telling us to submit to evil, but to refuse to oppose it on its own terms. We are not to let evil dictate the methods of our opposition.
Jesus is urging us to transcend both passivity and violence by finding a third way, one that is at once assertive and yet nonviolent. The correct translation would be the one still preserved in the earliest renditions of this saying found in the New Testament epistles: "Do not repay evil for evil" . The powerful and the rich may scoff at such paltry efforts to confront evil, but let us remember that the power of the cross was also hidden for those who saw it as a scandal.
Evil must and will always engulf itself with its own dark matter, extinguishing itself in its banality. These the words of Hannah Arendt as she also looked into the abyss of darkness… but proclaims that only good has any depth. Good can be radical… evil can never be radical, it can only be extreme, for it possesses neither depth nor any demonic dimension.
How often we also use the word, but… to extinguish the light of the gospel… to trivialise and to domesticate the words of Jesus? Thus it is that evil can spread like a fungus over the surface of the earth and lay waste the entire world.
St Augustine agreed that the gospel teaches non-resistance, and therefore declared that a Christian must not attempt self-defence, BUT if someone is attacking my neighbour, then the love commandment requires me to defend my neighbour, by force of arms if necessary. Thus is opened the door to the just-war theory, the military defence of the Roman Empire, and the use of torture and capital punishment. Following this lead, Christians have ever since been justifying wars fought for nothing more than national interest as "just. "
Evil comes from a failure to think. It defies thought for as soon as thought tries to engage itself with evil and examine the premises and principles from which it originates, it is frustrated because it finds nothing there. That is what is termed as the “banality of evil” . Discovering how easy it is for each one of us to slip into fundamentalism and this “banality of evil” is something that takes most people by surprise… and it is a lesson we have to learn over and over again.
Discovering this higher level and this new horizon of the gospel message as opposed to a trite message that suits us can also be a painful surprise. The Gospel warns us about reading the message through our cultural and ethnic prejudices… against judgements that we so lightly make to ostracise and to exclude our brothers and sisters from the community of the church, the table of the Lord, and the kingdom of God.
We are warned about disregarding the first and only commandment of universal love and compassion… ignoring the hidden horrors of sexism, racism, elitism, cultural imperialism and religious intolerance… all these evil things which come from within the worst of the human heart and make humanity, make us, and our communities unclean. We may posture and cry out in travail “never again, never again” , but unless we reach into our own hearts to extinguish those hidden ties to the “banality of evil” , the darkness of the abyss is but a breath away.
Take pity on us, Lord, take pity: we have had our fill of contempt. Our souls have had their fill of the laughter of the rich, of the contempt of the proud.
Beyond evil, the gospel is a story of healing and Hope, and we are called to be people of Hope. Love heals and Love restores. I think that each of us, no matter what we have gone through, no matter what we have seen, have within us that deep desire to return to the purity that lies within us. That is the dignity of all creation that love restores.
AJOURNEY
LENT
A Journey into the Desert
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