30th Sunday in Ordinary Time A
Readings: Exodus 22:20‑26 1 Thessalonians 1:5‑10
Matthew 22:34‑40
In today's Gospel Jesus, facing an extremely hostile situation, teaches that the whole of the Jewish Torah and the teaching of the prophets can be summarized in the twofold command to love God and neighbor. Because the love of God cannot be separated from the command to love the neighbor, the Lord's Torah is a source of protection for the weak and needy. Let us thank God for the gift of the Torah in the words of the responsorial psalm: "I love you, Lord, my strength" (Ps 18).
The laws in our Exodus reading are from the Book of the Covenant which is a law code designed for Israel's settled agricultural life in the land of Canaan. They all protect the rights of the weakest members of ancient society. Israelites are forbidden to molest resident aliens; they are not to wrong widows and orphans, and they are not to demand interest from the poor who are forced to go into debt. Two reasons are given for these laws. First of all, the Israelites should remember their own experience of being oppressed aliens in Egypt. Secondly, God is compassionate, and therefore he hears the cries of the oppressed and will act to vindicate them.
In the reading from Thessalonians Paul continues his defense of his apostolic work in that community by recalling the great success that his preaching of the gospel had among them. He goes on to praise them for "receiving the word despite great trials." He notes that they have become a model for the churches in Macedonia and Achaia because of their sincere conversion from idolatry to the service of the one "living and true God" as they await the return of the resurrected Jesus.
The Gospel continues the controversies between Jesus and the religious leaders in the Temple which have been the subject of our readings from Matthew for the last several Sundays. In this week's gospel reading the Pharisees, having heard Jesus silence the Sadducees in a debate about resurrection, "attempt to trip him up" on a matter of major concern to them: the importance of the Mosaic Torah. A lawyer, representing the Pharisees, asks him, “Teacher, which commandment of the law is the greatest?” One must remember that the Torah contains 613 precepts. Some rabbis held that all were equally important, while others offered some sort of summary or gradation of the commands. Jesus' answer is deeply rooted in the traditions of his people. He names as the greatest command the love of God demanded in the greatest Jewish prayer, the Shema`: "Hear, O Israel . . . You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart, with your whole self, and with all your mind" (Deut 6:4‑5). Jesus then goes on to link this to a second command taken from the Holiness Code in the Book of Leviticus: "You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Lev 19:18). For Jesus these commands are the two pegs on which hang the whole of the Torah and the prophets. All their teachings are founded on these two commands, and all the details of the Torah legislation are reducible to them. When we are confused by the endless controversies and hostilities that tend to swirl around religion, Jesus' simple and straightforward teaching provides a welcome guide.
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