Homily for February, 27th, 2020: Deuternomy 30:15-20;
Luke 9:22-25.
God’s chosen
people, the Jews, were slaves in Egypt for more than four centuries,
over double the life of slavery in our country. Oppressed people seldom develop
high standards of social life. The high statistics of black on black crime in
our country illustrate this. They also show that we are still paying the price
of slavery. The price of oppression continues to be demanded even after the
oppression has ended. The stories coming out of North Korea are even worse.
Oppressed people follow the law of the jungle, preying on one another in ways
that horrify us.
So, the ragtag
group of people who crossed the Red Sea with
Moses had grown accustomed for centuries to inflicting on one another the cruelty
they experienced from the people who had enslaved them.
This is the
background for God’s gift to Moses of the Ten Commandments. They were not then,
nor are the Commandments now, fences to hem people in. The Commandments were
and are ten signposts pointing the way to
human flourishing and freedom.
That is
exactly what Moses tells the people in our first reading. “Today I have set
before you life and prosperity, death and doom. … If you obey the commandments
of the Lord your God … [He] will bless you … If, however you turn away your
hearts … and serve other gods … you will certainly perish. …Choose life, then,
that you and your descendants may live.”
Is that just
long ago and far away? Don’t you believe it! The worship of false gods is as
widespread today as it was in Bible times. Today’s idols are pleasure, power,
possessions, and honor. None of those things is bad. They become idols, only
when we make pursuit of any one of them central in our lives. Once we do that,
we inevitably experience frustration – because we can never get enough.
What is the remedy? Jesus gives it to
us in the gospel. “Whoever wishes to be my follower must deny himself and take
up his cross daily and follow me.” Doing that means putting the Lord at the center of our lives: before our own
desires and ambitions, even before those whom we love most. A long life has
taught me that people who do that, and only such people, experience the peace
and joy that only the Lord can give.
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