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7th Sunday Ordinary Time – Love one another

1 Sam. 26: 7-9, 12-13, 22-23; Ps. 103:1-4, 8, 10, 12-13; 1 Cor. 15:45-49; Lk. 6:27-38

Today in the gospel the Lord makes clear what it is to truly “love one another”.  When he calls us to “love your enemies and do good to those who hate you” he is reminding us of what we as humanity did to him and how he responded to our rejection of him then on the cross and now by our sinfulness.  Jesus prayed to the Father to forgive us of our sins. 

Jesus loves us even when we strike him on the face with our sins.  He continues to give to us who ask for his mercy, to those of us who forget to show our gratitude for our very life and all we have.  Instead, we judge, we measure what we give, we refuse to forgive, and in doing so we limit all that God desires for us to receive in his abundance of grace. 

David recognized that Saul was a chosen one of God even as Saul sought to persecute and kill David.  Saul chose to act mercifully in return and not kill Saul when he had the opportunity instead, he acted with love and brought about the conversion of heart in Saul.  David acted in the image of Christ for the goal is not to conquer the enemy but to bring about a conversion from the desire to sin to the desire to love and bring peace.  This is what it means what it means to go from being “earthy” to “spiritual”.  The earthy destroys while the spiritual builds up what is good to something better. 

We are being called to bear the image of the “heavenly one” and shed the sins of the “first man, Adam” by taking on the call from the heavenly one and bear his image.  This we cannot do alone but with Christ all things are possible.  It is possible through our surrender to Christ so that by seeking we will know the way, and by the love of one another will we also rise with him every day and in the final coming. 

Jesus is ready to reveal himself to us but are we ready for him?  It is difficult to shed the scales of earthly life when we prefer to excuse ourselves for our weakness, faults, and sins claiming “I’m only human”.  Our definition of being “only human” is a false view of God’s creation for our humanity.  To be fully human in God’s eyes is to be perfect as he created us to be in his image.  God’s “perfect” is love, love one another. 

To be fully human is to rise above our weaknesses, faults, and sins and seek something greater for ourselves not something less.  The greater part can only come through our creator who gives us the power and grace to move mountains that stand in the way of becoming God’s great saints.  To settle for earthy beings is to settle for sin and sin leads to death. 

We are born earthly, that is with the fallen nature of the first Adam but God provides us his spiritual nature through Jesus by coming to receive him in the sacraments of the church.  Baptism washes away our sins and covers us with the spiritual blessing to enter into the spiritual life but we must also mature in this life to be all that God created us to be.  This requires our will for God cannot save us without us.  In his image we were given a soul to unite our mind to his, our heart to unite our love to his heart, and our will to accept the will of the Father through obedience, the obedience that guards and helps us to reach the promise land, the heavenly kingdom, the love that lasts for eternity.  Love one another! 

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7th Sunday Ordinary Time –   The Golden Rule

1 Sam. 26:2, 7-9, 12-13, 22-23; Ps. 103:1-4, 8, 10, 12-13; 1 Cor. 15:45-49; Lk. 6:27-38

The Golden Rule “Do to others as you would have them do to you.”  In the first reading David has the opportunity to strike Saul dead.  Saul is in search of David to kill him and instead of David having the mindset of “the first Adam”, to do to Saul as he would do to you, he takes the mindset of the “last Adam” with a “life-giving spirit” and spares Saul with a clear sign of mercy by taking Saul’s “spear and water jug” while he slept.  David acted in the spirit of Christ doing to Saul what he would have Saul do in return, spare his life.  This is the new commandment “to love one another” as he loves us under the Golden Rule and the Lord will spare us for eternity. 

Otherwise, what good is that!  “That” is to live in the flesh as the “first Adam” with “earthy” beliefs giving to those who give you, good only to those who are good to you, and lending expecting a return.  We are to put on the mind of God and today Jesus lays out this spiritual mindset to love the sinner despite the sins and pray for them.  God is not done with them and he is not done with us either in our conversion to “bear the image of the heavenly one…the last Adam” to be perfect by doing to others as we would have them do to us. 

God calls us to be perfect knowing that all perfection comes from him through his grace when we seek him.  If only for this moment our prayer is to be “I will be perfect with the help your grace as called to be in the perfection of this moment”.  In this moment we choose to respond to his grace within us to be perfect in our treatment of the “other” before us.  Even if the last moment was far from perfect this moment is what I have to respond to.  If in this moment through the grace of God we are perfect in our love, in our charity, in our mercy then the next moment may build upon it for now we enter into the kingdom of God where grace abounds.  Let us bury the earthy Adam in us and rise with the last Adam into his kingdom this moment, this hour, in this circumstance that we are in.  The Golden Rule is the response to the call to be perfect. 

With perfection comes generosity.  Spinoza the philosopher says, “If love is the goal generosity is the road to it.”  God is love and we desire true love we desire God and God loves a cheerful giver.  This is the meaning of today’s gospel, blessing those who curse you, doing good to all, giving of ourselves, being merciful and forgiving and the Lord cannot be outgiven in what he will “pour into our lap”. 

The wisdom of David was to not commit sin to save his earthy flesh but to convert the heart of Saul from committing sin.  Consider how our acts can be a source of conversion even for those who oppose us and desire our “death” in a cancel culture.  Many tried to silence the apostles, imprison them and even have them put to death but their love and sacrifice only made for the conversion of many by their courage to not fear but love by the Golden Rule.  David was a warrior taught to fight and defeat his enemy or lose in battle with his honor, his pride, his valor.  The words humble, forgiving, and loving do not come from training on the earthy battle field.  He did not learn the Golden rule from the world but from the spirit of God that lived within him. 

The battlefield of our life is fought in the mind and in the spirit of truth.  The mind is the battlefield leading us to act for good or evil, for righteousness or abuse, for justice or injustice.  Even in its sleep it is processing creating dreams of its struggle to overcome the conflict of life.   We can only come to rest our mind in thee, O Lord as we enter into the temple of the spirit of God within the holy ground of our soul.  The soul of David was filled with the holy ground of the spirit from where the Golden Rule lived and went forth to conquer in the spiritual warfare of the world. 

Saul was anointed by God and David was anointed by God yet one was overcome in the warfare of the mind for an earthy kingdom and the other chose the greater kingdom of the spirit of God.  We have been anointed by God in our baptism and continue to receive God in the sacraments of the church, but the warfare of Saul and David remains within our soul.  One will decrease and the other increase by our faith, hope, and love as we place our trust in the eternal God or in our own limited earthy power.

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