24th SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME A
THE MAGIC “AS”
I recently finished
reading a small but excellent book on the mercy of God. The book
gives four conditions for receiving this great gift of God's goodness
on weak, sinful, erratic and wounded people. The first one is trust,
the second is humility, the third is gratitude, and the last is
forgiveness. The gospel offers a good explanation of the importance
of the last one.
The point of the gospel
(Mt. 18) is not that God forgives. That is a given. Every one knows
that from the early stages of life. God is greater that any fault
that human beings can commit and therefore, he can pardon sins, and
purify all blemishes of the soul.
However, the gospel
stresses that forgiveness comes with a condition. The understanding
master asks the harsh servant, who he has previously forgiven a huge
debt: should you not have had pity “as” I had pity on you? (v.
33). With those words, the master angrily revoked the privileges he
has given this debtor.
This “as” is not an
isolated conjunction in the statements of Our Lord. Repeatedly, Jesus
used “as” in his preaching and teaching. We are to be perfect
“as” the heavenly Father; to love “as” he has loved us; to
receive forgiveness “as” we forgive others. And now, to show
mercy “as” we have also experienced it.
Why insist on this “as”?
The Lord is telling us that the basis of our love and service is not
our own selves. God is the model of all goodness, but he is not a
model to be admired and adored from a distance. He is the model of
life that invites us to participate in his way of dealing with
people, with our brethren, and especially with our enemies. In the
same way that we receive from his hands, we are to pass on to others
the bounty of the merciful God.
It is not easy to
forgive, to let go, to forget, and to release ourselves from the
shackles of the past. Relying on ourselves, how can we truly and
sincerely do it? But with God, all things are possible, if only we
hatch on to his way of doing things. Let us beg for the grace to
forgive as we have been forgiven, to share love as we have known it
from God.