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Liturgical day
: Sunday 22nd (A) in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Mt 16:21-27): Jesus began to make it clear to his
disciples that He must go to Jerusalem; He would suffer many things
from the Jewish authorities, the chief priests and the teachers of
the Law. He would be killed and be raised on the third day. Then
Peter took him aside and began to reproach him, «Never, Lord!
No, this must never happen to you». But Jesus turned to him and
said, «Get behind me, Satan! You would have me stumble. You are
their king not as God does, but as people do».
Then
Jesus said to his disciples, «If you want to follow me, deny
yourself, take up your cross and follow me. For whoever chooses to
save his life will lose it, but the one who loses his life for my
sake will find it. What will one gain by winning the whole world if
he destroys himself? There is nothing you can give to recover your
own self. Know that the Son of Man will come in the Glory of his
Father with the holy angels, and he will reward each one according to
his deeds».
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Commentary: Fr. Joaquim Meseguer i García (Sant Quirze del
Vallès-Barcelona, Catalonia)
«If
you want to follow me, deny yourself, take up your cross and follow
me»
Today,
we can also see Peter —a most remarkable figure and great
testimony and teacher of the faith—as a man of flesh and blood.
With virtues and failings, as each one of us. We have to be grateful
to the Evangelists for having realistically acquainted us with the
personality of the first followers of Christ. Peter, who —as we
read in the Sunday's 21st Gospel— makes an excellent
confession of faith, and deserves a great praise by Jesus and the
promise of the maximum authority within the Church (cf. Mt
16:16-19), also receives a sharp reprimand from the Master, because,
on his journey to faith, he still has a lot to learn: «Get
behind me, Satan! You would have me stumble. You are their king not
as God does, but as people do» (Mt 16:23).
Listening
to Jesus' scolding Peter gives us a good motive to make an
examination of conscience about our Christian personality. Are we
truly faithful to the teachings of Jesus, to the point of actually
thinking like God, or are we rather adapting ourselves to the
criteria and way of thinking of this world? Throughout history, the
sons of the Church have fallen into the temptation of following this
world thinking, of leaning on the material riches, of yearning for
politic power or social prestige; and at times, we are more keen on
the worldly interests than in the spirit of the Gospel. Before these
facts, we are asked once again the same question: «What will
one gain by winning the whole world if he destroys himself?»
(Mt 16:26).
After
clearing up these things, Jesus teaches us what thinking like God
means: to love, with whatever is implied about denying ourselves in
favor of our neighbor. This is why following Christ means taking up
the Cross. It is a very tight following, because «with so good
a friend and so good a captain at our side, Who came forward first of
all to suffer, one can bear everything. He helps us; He gives us
strength; He never fails; He is a true Friend» (St. Teresa of
Avila). And..., when the Cross is a sign of sincere love, then it
becomes enlightening and a sign of salvation.
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