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Liturgical day
: Monday 27th in Ordinary Time |
Today's Gospel (Lk 10:25-37): A teacher of the Law came and began
putting Jesus to the test. And he said, «Master, what shall I
do to receive eternal life?». Jesus replied, «What is
written in the Scripture? How do you understand it?». The man
answered, «It is written: You shall love the Lord your God with
all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength and with
all your mind. And you shall love your neighbor as yourself».
Jesus replied, «What a good answer! Do this and you shall
live».
The
man wanted to keep up appearances, so he replied, «Who is my
neighbor?». Jesus then said, «There was a man going down
from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell into the hands of robbers.
They stripped him, beat him and went off leaving him half-dead. It
happened that a priest was going along that road and saw the man, but
passed by on the other side. Likewise a Levite saw the man and passed
by on the other side. But a Samaritan, too, was going that way, and
when he came upon the man, he was moved with compassion. He went over
to him and treated his wounds with oil and wine and wrapped them with
bandages. Then he put him on his own mount and brought him to an inn
where he took care of him. The next day he had to set off, but he
gave two silver coins to the innkeeper and told him: ‘Take care
of him and whatever you spend on him, I will repay when I come
back’». Jesus then asked, «Which of these three, do
you think, made himself neighbor to the man who fell into the hands
of robbers?». The teacher of the Law answered, «The one
who had mercy on him». And Jesus said, «Go then and do
the same».
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Commentary: Brother Lluís Serra i Llansana, marist (Rome, Italy)
«The
one who had mercy on him»
Today,
a Teacher of the Law asks Jesus the kind of question we may have
asked ourselves more than once, in our life: «Master, what
shall I do to receive eternal life?» (Lk 10:25). He
wanted to put Jesus to the test. The Master, though, wisely answers
what is written in the Scriptures, that is, to love the Lord your God
and your neighbour as yourself (cf. Lk 10:27). The key is to
love. If we seek the eternal life, we know that «faith and hope
will go away, but love will remain forever» (cf. 1Cor
13:13). Any life project, any spirituality, that have not love in its
center furthers us away from the actual meaning of our existence. An
often forgotten but important reference point, is to love oneself.
Only from our personal identity can we love God and our neighbours.
The
teacher of the Law goes still further when asking Jesus: «Who
is my neighbor?» (Lk 10:29). And he gets his answer with
a tale, a parable, a little story, far away from complicated
theories, but with a clear message. The model of the loving person is
a Samaritan, that is, someone who is a dropout, someone excluded from
God's people. When they saw the man beaten and half-dead, a priest
and a Levite just ignored him and passed by. Those who apparently are
closer to God (the priest and the Levite) are those who are farther
away from their neighbour. The teacher of the Law avoids to say the
word “Samaritan” to state who did behave as neighbor to
the wounded man: «The one who had mercy on him» (Lk
10:37).
Jesus' proposal is
clear: «Go then and do the same». It is not a theoretical
conclusion of the debate but an invitation to live the reality of
love, which is not only a vaporous feeling but a behaviour that
defeats socials denominations and stems from a person's heart. St.
John of the Cross reminds us «at the crepuscule of your life
you will only be examined of love».
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