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Liturgical day
: Thursday 23rd in Ordinary Time |

Today's Gospel (Lk 6:27-38): Jesus said
to his disciples, «But I say to you who hear me: Love your
enemies, do good to those who hate you. Bless those who curse you and
pray for those who treat you badly. To the one who strikes you on the
cheek, turn the other cheek; from the one who takes your coat, do not
keep back your shirt. Give to the one who asks and if anyone has
taken something from you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you
would have others do to you. If you love only those who love you,
what kind of graciousness is yours? Even sinners love those who love
them. If you do favors to those who are good to you, what kind of
graciousness is yours? Even sinners do the same. If you lend only
when you expect to receive, what kind of graciousness is yours? For
sinners also lend to sinners, expecting to receive something in
return. But love your enemies and do good to them, and lend when
there is nothing to expect in return. Then will your reward be great
and you will be sons and daughters of the Most High. For He is kind
towards the ungrateful and the wicked.
»Be
merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Don't be a judge of others
and you will not be judged; do not condemn and you will not be
condemned; forgive and you will be forgiven; give and it will be
given to you, and you will receive in your sack good measure, pressed
down, full and running over. For the measure you give will be the
measure you receive back».
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Commentary: Fr. Jaume Aymar i Ragolta (Badalona-Barcelona, Catalonia)
«Be
merciful, just as your Father is merciful»
Today,
the Gospel of the Lord is asking us twice to love our enemies. And,
immediately afterwards, it gives three positive instances of this
commandment: do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse
you, pray for those who offend you. It is a commandment that looks
difficult to abide by: how can we love those who do not love us? What
is more, how can we love those we know for sure that hate us? To love
like that is a gift from God, but we must be open to it. After all,
loving our enemies seems to be the wisest thing to do from a human
point of view: our enemy will feel unarmed; and to love him may be
the definite condition for him to refrain from being our enemy any
more. In line with the above, Jesus goes on saying: «To the one
who strikes you on the cheek, turn the other cheek» (Lk
6:29). This could be interpreted as an excessive mansuetude. But,
what did Jesus do when He was struck in the face in his Passion? He
certainly did not struck back, but with so great a firmness, full of
charity, that must have surprised that irate servant, He replied: «If
I said something wrong, testify as to what is wrong. But if I spoke
the truth, why did you strike me?» (Jn 18:22-23).
All
religions have a golden maxim: «Do not do unto others what you
would not want others to do unto you». Jesus, however, is the
only one to formulate it positively: «Do to others as you would
have others do to you» (Lk 6:31). This golden rule is
the basis for all morals. Commenting on this little verse, St. John
Chrysostom tells us: «There is even more, for Jesus did not
only say: ‘wish good to others’, but ‘do good to
others’»; this is why, the golden maxim proposed by Jesus
cannot just remain as wishful thinking, but it must be translated
into deeds.
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