Readings:
Ex.20:1-17; Ps. 19; 1Cor 1:22-25; John 2:13-25
Fr.
Emmanuel Emenike Onyia
WHAT
IS OUR ATTIUDE TOWARDS THE COMMANDMENTS OF GOD?
As we
prepare ourselves for the celebration of Easter, today the third Sunday in the
Holy Season of Lent we are all called to reflect on how we have been keeping
the commandments of God and how disposed are we towards encountering the risen
Lord. Thus, in our first reading today, we heard how the Lord God revealed his
Law and commandments to his people through Moses. These commandments are given
in order to establish good relationships and a covenant between God and the
people and also among the people themselves.
Here,
the Lord gave us the Ten Commandments, which we are familiar with, beginning
with the first three most important commandments of all, that is, to love the
Lord and honour him with all of our heart, our might, strength, and with all of
our whole being, glorifying his Holy Name, while honouring and keeping the day
he set aside for us to worship him, which we now observe every Sundays as Holy
Day for the Lord as we often gathered for the celebration of the Holy Mass as
we are doing today.
Following
these three commandments, are the other seven Commandments which focus on our
relationship with one another, beginning with the commandment to honour our
father and mother, so that we may have a long life in the land that the Lord
our God has given to us. Then, he commanded us not to kill. Not to commit
adultery. Not to steal. Not to bear false witness against our neighbour. not to
covet our neighbour’s goods. And not to covet our neighbour’s wife, or
properties. These no doubt, tell us that we cannot truly love God unless we
also love our neighbors, neither can we truly love our neighbours unless we
genuinely have the love of God in our hearts.
Dear
friends, the question that comes to mind today is: what is my attitude towards
the commandments of God? Are we keeping and living according to these
commandments of God? Some may say no, but some will say yes because they
believe that they have not broken any of the commandments. This no doubt is
good and great, but if we have not broken any of the commandments, have we kept
them? You may ask what do I mean by keeping them?
The
answer is simple if you have not broken the commandments, have you been keeping
and living by them? Have we sincerely honoured the Lord our God with all our
hearts and not use his Holy Name in vain? Have we really kept the Sabbath day
Holy? Have we truly and sincerely honoured and loved our parents? We may not
have killed anyone, but have we sought to preserve and defend life? We may not
have committed adultery, fornication, masturbation, homosexuality and
lesbianism, but have we seduced others into committing them or prevented others
from engaging in them?
We may
not have stolen from people, but have we prevented others from stealing by
sharing our goods with the poor and saving them the temptation of stealing as a
way of correcting them? We may not have bore false witness against our
neighbours, but have spoken the truth and defended the good name of others in
order to save them from falsehood? Yes, we may not have coveted our neighbour’s
goods, but have defended and protected our neighbour’s goods? We may not have
coveted our neighbour’s wife or properties, but have we defended and protected
them? We may say how does this concern me? But that is the essence of the
commandments, that is, to love and see to the well-being of others. To protect
and defend the rights of others. To guide and correct others when they are
doing the wrong things.
This
is exactly what Jesus did in our Gospel passage today when the Lord Jesus came
to the Temple of Jerusalem, saw the wrong things they were doing, and decided
to clear all the corrupt merchants and money changers who were doing their
business in the courtyard of the Temple. Here Jesus had not broken the
commandment of keeping the temple holy, but he will not let others to keep
break this commandment. They have to be corrected. Hence, he was furious that
all of those merchants and money changers were openly doing their business and
cheating the people of their hard-earned money right at the very place where
God himself dwells.
Thus,
he drove them away saying stop turning my Father’s house into a market for it
is a house of prayer and not a den of rubbers. And when he was interrogated he
said “Destroy this sanctuary, and in three days I will raise it up”. The
sanctuary Jesus is referring to here is the sanctuary which is his body the
Holy Church, which he has planned to restore at his resurrection. This salvific
work of Jesus is what St Paul is referencing in our second reading when he
said: “Here are we preaching a crucified Christ; to the Jews an obstacle that
they cannot get over, to the pagan's madness, but to those who have been
called, whether they are Jews or Greeks, a Christ who is the power and the
wisdom of God.
Therefore,
is not enough to say we have not broken any of the commandments, we need to ask
ourselves whether we are practising and living by them. For Jesus did not break
any of the commandments, rather he lived by them and taught us to do the same.
He has given us the guidance and the path for us to follow through his actions.
Hence, we are called today to imitate him.
LET US
PRAY: Lord God, as we listen to your words today, give us the grace and
strength to journey with you this Lenten season, so as to remain faithful and
be genuinely committed to living and keeping the Commandments you have bestowed
on us. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Happy Sunday to you all.