30th Sunday
TO LOVE God with all your heart mind and soul and your
neighbour as yourself is as simple and as hard as it gets. All else is window
dressing. This is a mission statement of morality and spirituality. It is the
task of a lifetime.
Note the priority – God, then neighbour, then self, and the
importance of the word ALL in relation to God and at the word AS between
neighbour and self. God alone is worthy of all our love, and other loves or
lesser loves are on the context of this complete gift of self – heart, soul,
mind and strength.
St Augustine said ‘love God and then do what you will’.
It is more than a statement of intent; it is a way of life of
striving to more fully appreciate what this love entails in practical living
out and decision making, even to the tiniest details. St Therese said that in
the heart of the Church she would be love, and she also taught us to do the
ordinary things with great love.
To love and to be loved, as I have often said before, are the
two great joyful discoveries awaiting each person. We are fortunate indeed if
we discover these truths early. Many psychological and emotional disturbances
occur in those who have not yet discovered the fact that they are
unconditionally loved, and that this love can never be taken away no matter
what happens to us; and that they are lovable, warts and all. Many childhood
experiences and the trials of life prevent us from reaching this state of
tranquillity and acceptance readily.
We are never going to be happy if we decide to live in
splendid isolation, although we might want to choose to be; nor are we destined
to eke out ‘lives of quiet desperation’. Love does not have to be affective, or
erotic, but the emotional thrill of love must be experienced at least once in
one’s lifetime to believe in love, and to begin to appreciate the higher loves
– of God, of sacrifice, or striving to live out love, and to be IN LOVE WITH
CHRIST, not just ‘to love Him’ as a banal statement of intent. The great
definition of love is to be found in St Paul in 1 Cor 13: Love is patient and
kind and so on.
If this love is not experienced, love is sought in vain
self-centredness, also called narcissism after the mythological figure of
Narcisssus who fell in love with his own reflection in a pool and drowned in
the attempt to attain embrace with self. The pain of self-destructive
behaviours associated with addictions and impulse control issues to do with
reckless eating, drinking, gambling, drug-taking, even shopping, are hugely damaging
to self and are acts of self-hate. True self-love or self-regard is found in
self-surrender to God AND others. We must completely surrender – and pray and
say out loud often – to God that we choose to accept Jesus Christ as our
PERSONAL Lord and Saviour – completely, whatever the consequences, whatever the
change required of us. Our lives change
drastically and we see others in a new light – that others are struggling too,
and that they will not find happiness without a personal encounter with Christ
Jesus our Lord,
The concern then for others – called service - distracts us
from self-pity and over-analysis, and we begin to see how we are gifts FOR
others and we need to CONSUME ourselves for others.
It is a love we want to share. There is a whole world out
there of people waiting to be listened to, whose problems we may not be able to
solve, but who wish to unburden themselves. They are eager to hear Good News in
a world of fear, pain and heartache.
Let us pray for those who dedicate their whole lives, who
spend themselves for others for the sake of the Gospel so that the love of
Christ may be preached, heard and experienced ion all His richness. In giving
may we too receive, and may we once more appreciate in our own lives ‘the
difference Christ makes.’ Amen
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