Easter V [C] : Acts 14:21-27; Rv 21:1-5a; Jn 13:31-35
One day, as
St. Teresa of Calcutta (Mother Teresa, 1910-1997) and her Missionaries of
Charity were tending to the poorest of the poor on the streets of Calcutta,
they happened across a man lying in the gutter, very near death. He was filthy,
dressed in little more than a rag and flies swarmed around his body.
Immediately, Mother Teresa embraced him, spoke to him softly and began to pick
out the maggots that were nesting in his flesh. A passerby was repulsed by the
sight of the man and exclaimed to Mother Teresa, “I wouldn’t do that for a
million dollars.” Her response was immediate, “Neither would I!” Obviously,
monetary gain did not motivate the diminutive woman known as the Saint of
Calcutta; love did. In her writings, Mother Teresa frequently affirmed the motivating
power of love. Quoting Jesus in today’s Gospel, she wrote, “Jesus said, ‘Love
one another. Such as my love has been for you, so must your love be for each
other.’” She continued, “We must grow in love, and to do this we must go on
loving and loving and giving and giving until it hurts – the way Jesus did. Do
ordinary things with extraordinary love: little things, like caring for the
sick and the homeless, the lonely and the unwanted, washing and cleaning for
them.” Elsewhere, Mother Teresa remarked that the greatest disease in the West
today is not tuberculosis, leprosy or even A.I.D.S.; it is being unwanted,
uncared for, unloved. That she did her part in trying to “cure” this disease
was attested in everything she did and in every word she said.
Jesus has
added a new element to the Old Testament command of love by telling us that the
true test of discipleship is to love other people in the same way that He has
loved us. Hence, the renewal of Christian life means a radical change of vision
and a reordering of our priorities in life. Such a renewal brings us to embrace
new attitudes, new values and new standards of relating to God, to
other people and, indeed, to our whole environment. For most of
us, “renewal” is something that comes at different stages in our lives,
each time bringing us to a deeper understanding, insight and commitment.
The command
of Jesus is both new and old. It repeats the precept of Lv 19:18 to love
one’s neighbor as one’s self. What is new is that this love characterizes the
new life inaugurated by Jesus and is proof of one’s love for God (1 Jn.
4:7). Jesus’ new commandment calls for love without limits, conditions, or
prerequisites. This love opens our eyes to facts that we might otherwise
overlook that the poor in the world belong to our family; that those who live
in despair may be saved by our care of them; that peace can come to the world
through our efforts.
It was a
love that was attentive to the poor and the needy. During his life on
earth, Jesus Himself was lovingly present to those who were not at all lovable.
He allowed himself to be moved with pity and compassion when he
encountered those in need, and he was moved to tears in the midst of sadness.
He openly shed tears at the tomb of Lazarus. He shed tears also over the
city of Jerusalem. Even the anger that Jesus displayed in the Temple
was rooted in love — the love for His Father and for His Father’s
house. Jesus loved by serving others, by helping them and by healing
others. His was a love that healed and built up, that challenged
and inspired people. It was a deeply forgiving and sacrificial
love. “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s
friends” (15: 13).
We live in a
culture that devalues life and worships death—a culture in which people
drug themselves into oblivion. Women and girls are willing to starve themselves
to fit some unrealistic media image of beauty and worth. People and relationships
are sacrificed on the altar of “workaholism.” How are we to love
ourselves when we are told over and over again that we are unlovable? How
do we reclaim our basic worth? We can become whole and holy only
when we learn to love ourselves properly, acknowledging the presence of the
Triune God in our souls, making our bodies the “temple of the Holy Spirit.”
Only those persons who are fully convinced that they are themselves lovable
because God has loved them and so brought them into being can reach out
comfortably and unconditionally to love those who themselves cannot love but
can only hurt and hate and destroy. It is through constant love-centered
interaction with God and each other that the “new earth, the new Heaven and the
new Jerusalem” can begin to come into existence.
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