4TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME A
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THE GREATEST TEACHER
We have started our serious
journey this year into the treasures of the gospel according to Matthew. This
gospel is the first in the order of the gospels as we find in the bible, and
also the first in the order of liturgical readings as we find in our ABC Sunday
Lectionary. For the church, the gospel of Matthew is the gospel par excellence
because of its content, style and above all, its message.
Today Matthew takes us to the mountain
and there, to listen to Jesus. Matthew was writing in the year 80-90 AD to both
Jews and Gentiles who converted to Christianity. To this mixed group of
believers, what was Jesus’ message? The gospel gives us the teachings of Jesus
in magnificent sermons, the first of which is the Sermon on the Mount (Mt.
5:1-12a).
Jesus gives this teaching to his
disciples as the lawgiver and teacher of the New Covenant. If the Old Covenant
had Moses as the lawgiver, then Christians have a greater one, the Lord Jesus
Christ, who is “God with us.”
The beatitudes, eight of them,
stand next to the Ten Commandments in the heart of Christians as clear
expressions of God’s will. The word beatitudes come from beatus or blessed, the
word that Jesus used to start every utterance in this day’s gospel.
Blessed are the poor in spirit,
those who mourn, the meek, those who
hunger and thirst for righteousness, the merciful, the clean of heart,
the peacemakers, and those persecuted for righteousness. We can take each of
these and preach on these in a retreat or extended 8-Sunday homily. But the
most important thing to remember is that these are the ways Jesus offers us to
find blessedness or happiness in our lives today and in our relationship with
God.
These days, do we still believe
in the proclamation of Matthew, that Jesus is the greatest Teacher for our
lives? Do we take to heart the teachings of Jesus and live by them? It is sad
that today many believe more the rhetoric or politicians than the words of the
Lord. Many refuse to listen to the church’s proclamation but are willing to
absorb the reasoning of those who teach people to kill, to destroy human life
in the womb, to weaken families, and to sow division and fear among the people.
If indeed we believe the
beatitudes, we must even more so, believe in the One who spoke them, the Son of
God who is our only Teacher in life! Who do you really believe, Jesus who shows
us the path of joy or mere mortals whose words attract us towards suffering and
death?