Wednesday, 7 June 2023

Homily For Thursday Ninth Week in Ordinary Time Year A, 8th June, 2023



Reading: Tobit 6:9-12.7:1.9-12.16.8:1.4-9; Ps. 128; Mark12:28-34

Rev.  Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia

 

WHAT DOES THE LORD REQUIRE FROM US

 

In our journey of faith we struggle with so many commitments and responsibilities. Oftentimes, we want to know which one should be our first priority. What should be the most important thing to focus our energy? What should become the foundation of all the things we need to do? In fact, we just want to know what is really required of us?

 

This is the deposition of the Scribe in our Gospel passage today, who came to Jesus and asked the same question. In response to his question which is about the greatest commandment? Jesus reminds him of the 'Shema Israel' - שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל, the prayer that they knew and recite from their earliest years.

 

In this prayer they learned that the most important thing in life is to love God with all their heart, and with all thy soul, and with all their mind. That is, with all the powers and faculties of the soul; as under the influence and guidance of the more noble faculties of the soul, the mind, the understanding, judgment, and will. Jesus then added: to love one’s neigbhour as the second priority.

 

In other words, loving God with all your heart, with all your understanding and strength, and to love your neighbour as yourself is what the Lord required of us and it is the foundation of all the things we have to do. And Jesus set as the standard of love not just by the love he was able to show, but by the depth of love which he shows by dying for us thereby calling us to do to do the same. This is possible only when we understand the true meaning of love and sacrifice and this is what is really lacking in our relationship with God and neighbours.

 

 

In fact, a critical look at what is happening in our world today, it is obvious that the world has lost the true meaning of love and sacrifice. This present generation has failed to understand the true meaning and source of love and this can be seen in the kind of fruit we bear. The fruit of love in this generation is so complicated: love has become a tool for selfishness, deception, greed, emotional and sexual satisfaction. This is because we have abandoned God who is the source and power of love and create for ourselves a mirage in the name love.

 

Dear friends, today, we are called to come back to the source of love, God himself, who teaches us that love is an attitude that seeks the good of others despite how we feel about them, he teaches us to be merciful, just as he is merciful. That love is an attitude that is sacrificial, an attitude that forgives, an attitude that accommodates, preserves, heals and builds up when every other things fails.

 

This is exactly what we see  in the lives of Tobias and Sarah in our first reading, who through prayers chose to invite God first in their relationship. This is the kind of attitude the world needs now, the attitude that comes from the pure love of God and neighbours, not the kind of selfish and humiliating can of love we see in our society today.

 

But how can humanity recover this power of love and harness it to bear more fruit in our societies where it seems as if true love exist no more? This is possible when we realize that we are products of love and are called to live out our essence, which is to love. Therefore, we can make our choice today to renew our commitment to keeping these two commandments and to reflect on how best we can put them together for our own good and the good of humanity. Remember, in you resides that love that is lacking in others.

 

LET US PRAY: Lord God, in you is the fullness of love, grant that we may remain steadfast in faith by truly loving you and our neighbours and so conquer the world full of hatred, self-centeredness, greed and corruption, we ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Do have a fruitful day.

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