Let Go and Let God, Daily Homily Reflections, Jacob Steinhardt, c.1952.
Jesus said, “… go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift.” Matthew 5:24.
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The gospel today is taken from the Sermon on the Mount, which began last Sunday. Several weighty topics are covered here, including the meaning of the Jacob Steinhardt woodcut above. Jesus’ words are spoken so easily: ….go first and be reconciled with your brother. The reality of putting that demand into practice is most definitely not. But it sets the correct priority. It usually means having to eat some crow, and I don’t know anyone who wants to do that! It might well be a fact that in any dispute, the truth usually lies somewhere in the middle, but even that means that fault may well be on both sides. And then there is the necessity of one person in the dispute having to try and set the situation right, even if they believe they are in the right. Something festering is most unlikely to dwindle away to nothing. Someone in the dispute has to make the first move. Clearly in today’s gospel, Jesus is teaching each one of us to make the first move! He gives no indication of who is at fault in the dispute, only teaching the necessity of putting it to right one way or another. And in the wider view, taking all of today’s gospel into account, Jesus says flatly that the law is clear, and is to be obeyed: “….whoever obeys and teaches these commandments will be called greatest in the kingdom of heaven”. And then there are the examples of Jesus’ hyperbole: “If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one of your members than to have your whole body thrown into Gehenna”. Yes, there is sense in that statement, but the intent is to make sure that the hearer understands that a remedy is essential – you have to do something about a dispute to end it satisfactorily. But at the root of all this is the necessity of having a law at all. Law if the foundation of all societies. It gives a picture of what society states is necessary behavior from members of that society. In Legally Blonde, for example, certain stereotypes prevalent in the USA legal system (and no doubt in many others too) are challenged and defeated rather splendidly, showing that inherent intelligence is clearly more important than judgments based on appearance or sex. Furthermore, it varies depending on whichever society has formulated its law. For example, there are laws in communist China which require behavior which, in USA society for example, would never be considered illegal – free speech is one example. What one is free to say or criticize the government in New York may well have you incarcerated in Hong Kong! But on another level entirely there is Divine Law, given by God. And today’s gospel addresses that dimension.

Moses’ Descent from Mount Sinai, Rosselli 1482, Sistine Chapel. Vatican City State.
Now in this dimension there is no police force, there are no lockups where we might consider our fate, no threat of punishment (except that which we bring on ourselves). There is also no ignorance; we all know, taking one example from this law, is that we must honor our parents. For some that might be an enormous and unacceptable demand, but for most of us it is not. Also, stealing another’s property is illegal in just about all the laws of every society in every age! In ancient Greece there was a wide variety of what was deemed acceptable and unacceptable behavior. However, each society had a legal system, which is my point. It became a necessary construct very early on when humanity began to gather together in any organized way. And so it was that the Hebrews accepted the Law of God (eventually), brought down to them by Moses, who had received it from God on Mount Sinai. (And, on another plane, the magazine Elle is referred to as “the bible” in Legally Blonde…). And given all that, it is not at all surprising that Jesus said, in today’s gospel, Amen, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken place. Once all things had taken place, he summed everything up in the single command to love God, neighbor and self. And it is by that law we are all asked to take to heart, absorb and live day by day by day, as they sing in Godspell. Those words, by the way, were written by St. Richard of Chichester in England many years ago. Take a look.

St. Richard of Chichester, Anastpaul, Breathing Catholic.
This Wednesday is Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of the great season of Lent, the time when we all prepare for the commemoration of the Lord’s Passion, Death and Resurrection. It is the special time of introspection, when we address our identity as children of God. What exactly does that mean for each one of us? Have we taken on that great identity with power and strength, or unwillingly and without conviction? It is the season to address such foundational questions and what we should do as a result. Let us ask God to guide us through those 40 days in the wilderness, and help us emerge as stronger children of God.

What does Lent want from us? National Catholic Reporter, March 2025.
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