Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time

In his teaching on the Law of Moses, Jesus gives us tow more examples of how disciples are to act. The issues of retribution and love of enemies are difficult challenges for us. It is not easy to desire revenge and to ignore or even oppress those who are different from us. The Kingdom-teaching that Jesus demands is quite different from what might be the status quo in dealing with others. We are called to a greater law, the law of love. We are called to attitudes and actions that see others as worth of God’s love, and deserving of our respect and compassion.

Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

In Matthew’s Gospel Jesus follows the teaching on the Beatitudes with a number of sayings that begin, “You have heard it said…but I say to you.” In these statement Jesus teaches us that there is more to being disciples than just keeping the letter of the law. Jesus asks us to go beyond the words of the law and be attentive to any word or deed that can do harm to another. His examples are ordinary situations in life, but his teaching is rooted in kingdom thinking, not human concepts.

Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Jesus uses two domestic images, salt and light, to teach the disciples how important they are in sharing his mission.  Notice that Jesus uses an emphatic phrasing: “You are…” Not,  you can be, or you might be, or maybe your will be.  No, he is very direct in naming them as salt and light, they are change agents.  Just as salt adds flavor to food and light dispels the darkness, so will they transform the world by their witness and their good deeds.    In accepting this identity we bring glory to God.

 

The Presentation of the Lord

To fulfill the law of Moses, Jesus’ parents present their son to the Lord.  When they meet Simeon and Anna, it is an encounter between the past and the future.  Simeon and Anna represent the long awaited hope of the Jewish people; Jesus is the fulfillment of that hope.  As Jesus’ mission unfolds, a mission that will be accepted and rejected.  Simeon’s words come true.  In our time we also live in the hope that Jesus’ mission will be kept alive by faithful disciples and that his teachings even those that are hard to bear, will one day be fulfilled.