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Thirtieth
Sunday in Ordinary Time– Year A
October 23, 2005
Catechist Background and Preparation
To prepare for this session, read all the readings.
Exodus 22:20–26
Psalm 18:2–3, 3–4, 47, 51
1 Thessalonians 1:5–10
Matthew 22:34–40
Spend a few minutes reflecting on what these readings mean for you today.
Is there a particular reading that appeals to you? Is there a word or
image that engages you?
Read the following Word in Liturgy and Catholic Doctrine
sections. Read the Word in Liturgy and Catholic Doctrine sections. These
give you background on what you will be doing this session. Read over
the session outline and make it your own. Check to see what materials
you will need.
The Word In Liturgy
The compilation of the Book of Exodus was the result of a long and complex
process. The second half of the work (cc. 19–40) deals with the
events at Mount Sinai, the giving of the Ten Commandments and detailed
prescriptions of various sorts that flow from them. The particular section
from which today’s reading is taken (22:18–23:19) has to do
with a variety of social and cultic matters. The three issues touched
on here concern groups of people who would have been particularly vulnerable
in the socioeconomic system of the tribes following their settlement in
Canaan. Resident aliens, widows, and orphans, as well as the poor who
had to borrow to survive, were all “at risk” populations within
a social milieu in which one’s welfare and security depended upon
being a property owner or at least being or having a breadwinner to provide
for the household. Of particular note is the way the text connects its
social policy imperatives both to Israel’s own history and to the
very nature of Yahweh. The Israelites had been treated compassionately
by a God of love in their times of vulnerability. No less would be demanded
of them now, if they were to remain faithful to their covenant relationship
with that same God of mercy. Concern for the poor and weak is a distinguishing
characteristic of Yahweh (“I will hear him; for I am compassionate,”
v. 26), and he in turn requires his people to refrain from exploiting
the vulnerable. Jesus in the gospel will pick up and develop this teaching
by demanding love for one’s neighbor (remember who is “neighbor”
in Jesus’ eyes; cf. Matthew 5:43–48), and he will then link
such love to the supreme command of the Torah, the love of God above all
else.
Today’s gospel reading is another of the controversy stories collected
in this place by Matthew (this entire section concludes with verses 41–46).
The question put to Jesus was not remarkable; in fact, it was a commonplace
query for a rabbi of the day. Nor is Jesus’ reply entirely original.
Other rabbis had similarly linked the two commandments of the law before
(Deuteronomy 6:5 & Leviticus 19:18). But there is something important
and original about the fact that Jesus puts both commandments on a par
with each other. The Pharisees had categorized the 613 precepts which
they observed as “light” and “heavy,” depending
on their perceived importance. Jesus takes the universally recognized
“heavy” precept of love of God and places it on an equal footing
with the Pharisees’ “light” precept regarding love of
one’s neighbor! For Matthew’s community, restating the Lord’s
command to love all without partiality seems to have been an extremely
important teaching (cf. Matthew 5:43–48; 7:12; 9:13; 12:1–8;
18:12–35; 25:31–46).
Catholic Doctrine
The Two Great Commandments
Jesus takes what had been two separate commandments and places them together.
This new, single and greatest commandment has an enormous impact on our
Catholic view of society and relationships between individuals and peoples,
as well as the complex network of relationships defined as world society.
Indeed, the Church sees this mutual reliance as being based in the unity
of the Trinity. The unity which characterizes God the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit is the very impetus for the members of the human community
to draw closer together. Given this view, the Church affirms the gospel
truth that love of God and neighbor cannot be separated (CCC 1878) and
bases all its insights regarding society on this foundation. These insights
can be described as: interdependence, the common good, respecting the
human person, solidarity, and the requirements of peace and justice.
The Church’s view on interdependence is not merely that we are social
beings but that we thrive and grow by living together in society. One
of the worst forms of punishment is solitary confinement. In other words,
living together is not something ancillary to human nature, rather, it
is by our dealings with one another, our mutual service of one another,
and our fraternal dialogue that we develop and flourish (GS 25). Catholics
understand, therefore, that interdependence is a requirement of our human
nature and the medium by which individuals respond to their vocation and
calling from God (CCC 1879).
The Church teaches that the good of the individual is related to the common
good (CCC 1905). The common good is described by the Second Vatican Council
as “the sum total of social conditions which allow people, either
as groups or individuals, to reach their fulfillment more fully and more
easily” (GS 26). Thus, the Church insists that every group that
composes society must take into account and acknowledge the needs and
legitimate aspirations of every other group.
Society can only be characterized as working for the common good when
it is founded upon respect for the human person. Such respect means every
individual be given ready access to basic necessities, such as food, clothing,
housing, freedom, education, family, work, privacy, and so on (CCC 1908).
Thus, as society develops, it must always uphold respect for the human
person and work for more humane conditions of life for all.
In the Catholic perspective, human solidarity is an outgrowth of the avenue
God has opened for us in providing holiness of life to us as a people.
Jesus saves us and creates for us a Church whereby we experience the depths
of our communion with God and one another. Each member of the Church gives
of oneself in service to others according to the gifts given by God, and
in that rendering of mutual sacrifice solidarity is increased until it
is brought to fulfillment in the kingdom. This friendship is built into
our very natures and echoes God’s befriending of us (CCC 1939).
Finally, the common good and human solidarity require the stability of
society that peace ensures, and peace, in turn, is promoted by justice.
Catholics understand that we have a concrete responsibility for one another’s
welfare (CCC 1913). Economic inequity and wide disparities of wealth between
groups is scandalous and promotes discord and instability (GS 29). Each
generation must provide the next with reasons for life and optimism. As
the Church prays, “Father, you have given all peoples one common
origin, and your will is to gather them as one family in yourself. Fill
the hearts of all . . . with the fire of your love and the desire to ensure
justice for all their brothers and sisters. By sharing the good things
you give us may we secure justice and equality for every human being,
an end to all division, and a human society built on love and peace”
(Sacramentary, Mass for the Progress of Peoples, Opening Prayer).
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