Monday, June 11, 2018

19 June 2018 - Reflection for Tuesday of the 11th week of Ordinary Time - Matthew 5:43-48


       Today’s Gospel does not contain a comforting message.  Harboring anger and resentment against our neighbor or loved one or family member can do a lot of damage to our life and the lives of those around us.  We all have heard of the feuding Hatfield and McCoy families from around the West Virginia – Kentucky border.  That feud originated around the time of the Civil War and lasted for decades between those two families, with many murders and killings being a part of that feud.  The History Channel aired a mini-series about that feud several years ago that reached a record audience for that channel.  That feud appeals to our imagination and reminds us of all the revenge and vengeance that take place in the world today. We all probably have known friends and family members whose lives are consumed with anger, so much so that it affects their whole outlook on life.  I once heard a lady say that when she gets up in the morning she looks into the mirror and wishes nothing but bad luck and sheer misery for her former husband.  It was quite a shock to hear the anger and hatred in her voice.
         In the face of all of this, Jesus tells us to be perfect just as our heavenly Father is perfect.  Sounds like an impossible order for us.  However, I have heard Monsignor Patrick Farrell, one of the wonderful Irish priest who served in our diocese for many years, tell parishioners that Jesus calls us to strive to perfection.  We will not meet the goal of that perfection, but the fact that we are trying our best and aiming for that perfection is what God sees.  Ignatius of Antioch, one of the early Church Fathers, wrote to the Church at Rome that he wishes to please God in his life of faith, not man.  If we try to follow God’s laws, if we strive toward heavenly perfection, then we will love our neighbors as ourselves, then we will do what is right in the eyes of God.   Holy Scripture often is not warm and cuddly.  Our Gospel today challenges us to look at our conduct, to look at what our goals are in life. And that can be a very uncomfortable task.  As Christians, as followers of Jesus, God is calling us to a higher standard.  Are we willing to strive for that heavenly perfection?

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