In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
Today's Gospel in short, contains everything which is the way of the
Christian. The first commandment is that we should love our God with
all our heart, with all our mind, with all our strength, with all
our being, and our neighbour as ourselves. To love means to prefer
all that is dear to the beloved person, to what is dear to us. To
love God means that we should live, and indeed be such that He could
rejoice in what we are, that there should be nothing alien to Him in
our lives.
And here comes the second commandment, which the lawyer did not
understand: that we should love our neighbour as ourselves. To love
again our neighbour, forgetting ourselves. Very often we think that
we are worthy Christians if we feel that we have in our hearts a
warmth, that we love God. But this is not enough. The test of this
love is to share God's own love for every one of our neighbours. I
remember a sad moment in my own life, when my father asked me: what
was the dream of my life? I was young then, and I said, 'To be with
God alone.' And he looked sadly at me and said, 'You have not begun
to be a Christian.' Because if we love God we must share with Him
all His concerns for the whole world and for each person in this
world.
Let us, therefore, take this short event in the life of Christ and
the parable as a rule. We will never be able to know how much we
love God. It is difficult, because it is so easy to delude oneself.
Even when we say that we love someone, a moment may come when
selfishness, indifference, a quarrel may make an end, at least for a
time, to our mutual friendship and closeness. But there is a
criterion which is objective. How do you treat your neighbour? What
does he mean to you? If he means nothing, if he is a passer-by, if
he is only someone in your way, or if he is someone to whom you can
pay attention when you are in the right mood, then we have not begun
to love God and to love the world together with Him. Let us
therefore think of it, ask ourselves pertinent questions, and
redress our lives. Amen. |