Thirty First Sunday of Ordinary Time
Mk 12:28-34 Dear Friends, In his response the scribe’s question, Jesus begins with the phrase, “Hear O Israel! (Mk 12:29) These words hold profound significance in understanding Jesus’ statement on love of God and love of neighbor. First of all, he places his response in the context of Israel’s call in which God has placed everything the initiative of divine love. God loves us first. The second element is the invitation to listen. Listening is the surest way into the mystery of God’s love.
The first part of Jesus’ response was as familiar to the average Jew at the time as the sign of the cross is for today’s Catholic. Jesus, however, adds to that familiarity the call to love your neighbor. Jesus is beckoning us into a community of love. The love which is initiated with God must be returned not only to God but that love needs to to include our neighbor. In this way, we are brought into a community of love.
This brings me to my favorite description of the Bible. It states that the Bible’s message is simple: God is love and Jesus teaches us what love is. In listening to find love and wisdom, our quest draws us to Jesus.
Jesus teaches us who God is and how God loves. In our encounter with Jesus, we experience the compassion and mercy of God. In Jesus, we learn that there are no limit to God’s love, no fences or labels of exclusion. In Jesus, we listen to God and hear the cry of the poor and marginated, all the forgotten who are isolated in ways only the broken human heart can develop to isolate and abandon. In Jesus on the cross, God’s word lays before us a challenge to put everything and everyone in second place so we “love God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength… you shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Mk 12:30-31)
All four of the Gospels are the richest symphony of God’s love song that is Jesus. In the Gospels, we hear the call to respond to our daily reality with a heart that is oopen and healed. We need to be open to life because if we are in touch with Jesus, we will be lured outside the limiting and constricting boundaries of our selfishness. The needs of our neighbor will be set before us in a new clarity and urgency.
This love of God and love of neighbor is what our hearts were made for. However, this is not always what our hearts want. If we are listening to Jesus, we cannot avoid hearing the difficult message. Love means to lose our life to save it. Love means to seek to be the servant not the ruler. Love means to wash the feet of all. Love means to walk with Jesus to Jerusalem. Love means we win by losing.