Today,
Jesus teaches us a masterly lesson: do not choose the best seat:
«When you are invited to a wedding party, do not choose the
best seat» (Lk 14:8). Jesus knows we like to look for
the best places: in official acts, informal gatherings, at home, at
the table. He knows our trend to overrate ourselves out of vanity, or
worse still, out of a poorly hidden pride. So let us therefore be
careful with honors, for «the heart remains chained where it
finds the possibility of delight» (St. Leo the Great).
Haven't we ever been
told that there were no colleagues with more merit or better personal
values than us? It is not, therefore, a question of a sporadic feat,
but of an assumed attitude of considering ourselves the smarter, the
most important, the most deserving, the always rightful ones; an
aspiration supposing a narrow vision of ourselves and of those around
us. In fact, Jesus invites us to practice the perfect humility,
consisting in not judging ourselves or the others, and to be
conscious of our individual insignificance, in the global cosmic and
of life concert.
Thus,
Jesus, proposes us, by precaution, to always choose the lowest seat,
because, while we may not know the intimate reality of the others, we
are fully aware that in the great show of the Universe we are totally
irrelevant. Therefore, to place us in the last position is to be on
the safe side. Lest the Lord, that knows us well intimately, did not
have to tell us: «‘Please give this person your place’.
What shame is yours when you take the lowest seat!» (Lk
14:9).
In the same line of
thought, the Master invites us to place ourselves with humility
beside those chosen by God: the poor, the crippled, the lame and the
blind, and to be at the same level than them to find ourselves amidst
those God loves with special tenderness, and to overcome the
repugnance and shame to share with them table and friendship.