9th
Week OT (Th)
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell, OP
St.
Albert the Great, Irving
Thinking
about your daily life as a follower of Christ, what is one thing you
have the most difficulty doing consistently? Personal prayer?
Forgiving your neighbor? Suffering well? If you are like me, you will
say “loving God, self, and neighbor.” It takes a lot of rile me
up, and I don't hold grudges. Over the years, I've developed a
Stoical philosophical approach to disaster, disease, and the general
chaos of the world. Living with other friars has also helped me
better handle the temptations of self-righteous anger and cynicism.
As the brothers here can tell you, I'm still working on it! Practice
makes perfect. But
the one area where I struggle mightily is caritas,
love. And the reason for this is pretty simple: I
am not yet a saint.
Thanks be to God, Jesus provides everything necessary for the Saint
Becoming Process. He orders each one of us, “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.” Then,
dying on the Cross, he shows us how it's done.
“You
SHALL love the Lord, your God. . .You SHALL love your neighbor as
yourself.” Singular, second-person imperative. An order. Not a
suggestion, or a plea – a command. And a strange command at that.
Usually, we think of commands in connection with actions. March! Sit!
Wear a mask! Pay taxes! So, when our Lord commands us to love, what
is he commanding us to do? How are we supposed to act? I mean, isn't
love a feeling, an emotion? Isn't it a passion that either just is or
isn't there? I love my family and friends, but I know them well. How
do I love a stranger? An enemy? How do I love God Who is not a
being but
Being Itself? How do I love Being Itself??? Jesus commands us, You
shall
love.
You shall always and everywhere prefer
and will the
highest possible Good for God, neighbor, and self. . .in that order.
You obey the Lord's command by converting, by turning your intellect
to the Truth and your will to the Good, always and everywhere doing
the greatest possible Good Thing for God, neighbor, and self. This is
the foundation for the Law of Moses and the whole of the Law of Love.
This is how you and I become saints: sacrificial love, a love
expressed perfectly from the Cross.
What
keeps us from that Cross? That is, what or who in this world tempts
you away from loving perfectly? More often than not it is the Self
who lures us away. My needs. My feelings. My hurt. My wants. My
reputation. My fears. My prejudices. My work. Me as an idol whom I
worship b/c I am – obviously – the source and
summit of My universe, right? Not quite. You and I belong to Christ.
We are his Body in this world. His hands and feet and eyes and ears
and voice. We are his flesh and bone sent to do his work and
accomplish his mission. Anything that stands in the way, anyone who
stands in the way, stands in the way of our Lord's command to love
perfectly, sacrificially. If you yourself stand in your own way, then
there is nothing to do but turn around and come back to Christ. Turn
around and run back to the only one who can give you what you need to
be perfected in love. Health, wealth, reputation, career, stuff –
all of these crumble to dust when you
do. Sic transit gloria mundi! Thus
passes the glory of the world! You and I must die in this world
before we can live forever in the next.
And
this is why “you shall love” is so difficult to obey. I have to
die to love you perfectly. To will the greatest possible love for
God, for you, and myself, I must die in sacrifice. I must sacre
facere – make holy – everything I am and have. All of my
thoughts; all of my words; all of my deeds; my heart, my mind, my
soul, my body. All of it must be oriented toward understanding the
Truth and willing the Good so that I become a living sacrifice,
another Christ on the Cross for the salvation of the world. If this
sounds narcissistic – I must become another Christ! – remember
you and I were baptized into the life, death, and resurrection of
Christ, living, dying, and rising with him. You and I were
strengthened by the Holy Spirit. At every Mass we celebrate, you and
I make of ourselves an offering to the Father through Christ. You and
I eat his flesh and drink his blood, becoming him whom we eat and
drink. The only way any of us can ever come close to loving perfectly
in this life is to lose ourselves in the life and death of Christ,
allowing him to love perfectly through us, hoping, that on that Last
Day, standing before the Just Judge, it is his face he sees in ours.
Wear the face of Christ now. so that you might wear it forever.
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