THIRTY-FIRST
SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, November 3, 2024
(Deuteronomy
6:2-6; Hebrews 7:23-28; Mark 12:28-34)
Today’s
scriptures are brief, but deeply significant. We will focus on the first and
the gospel and leave the second reading for another occasion.
The passage
from the book of Deuteronomy literally calls for our attention. “Hear, O
Israel,” Moses cries out to the Israelite people. He announces the famous
“Shema,” the saying that every pious Jew repeats twice a day. Moses shouts it
because it contains perhaps the most important message in history. He addresses
us, Catholic Christians in the year 2024, as much as he did the Hebrews freed
from the tyranny of Pharaoh more than three thousand years ago. He wants us to tune
out for a moment our inner voice to heed the word of God.
The message
has two parts. First, Moses continues,
the Lord is the only god there is. All idols and fetishes – whether myths like
“Mother Earth” or the cravings of our hearts like luxuries – are imaginary.
They have no substance, much less the power to save. They are like clouds
during a drought, bringing hope whenever they appear, but soon dissipating.
Second,
Moses urges us to love the Lord, our God, not a little like we love our pets,
but more than our own lives. “…with all your heart … soul, (and) … strength”
says the prophet. We are to live for the purpose of pleasing God. Because
today, November 3, is the Feast of St. Martin de Porres, let’s use him as an
example. Martin spent his nights doing penance and praying to the Lord. He
spent his days doing works of charity for God’s children.
Now let’s
look at the gospel. Jesus is now in Jerusalem.
He has just bested the Pharisees about paying tribute to Caesar and the
Sadducees about the resurrection from the dead. Evidently his ideas have
impressed one scribe so much that the scribe wants his judgment on a pressing
question of his day: “Which is the first of all the commandments?” The answer
is not as obvious as it appears. The famous Rabbi Hillel said shortly before
Jesus’ time that the first commandment is: “What you hate for yourself, do not
do to your neighbor.” Today some, considering its placement in the Bible, would
say that the first commandment is: “Be fruitful and multiply.”
Jesus’
answer to the question shows greater wisdom. He gives two commandments known to
every Jew in his time. They are similar in structure, but different in their
objectives and their importance with the second being derived from the first.
First, we are to love God above all else. Second, we are to love our neighbor,
who is God’s child, as ourselves. If we keep both commandments in their proper
order, we will never stray from the path to eternal life.
The scribe
is pleased with Jesus’ response. He acknowledges that acting in this way “is
worth more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.” However, he does not say
that sacrifices lose all value. In fact, they have great value for the one who
performs them and for the beneficiary named by the doer. We need to remember
this when we are told that ethics are all that matters, that prayers and
sacrifices, even the Mass, can be set aside. But if we set them aside, how will
we be forgiven when we fail to show love to others? And what will we do when we
find ourselves completely overwhelmed with difficulties?
The passage
ends with Jesus congratulating the scribe on his insight. He tells him, “You
are not far from the Kingdom of God.” He is not far because he is staring in
the face of the Kingdom. If he follows Jesus like Bartimaeus in last Sunday’s
gospel, he will reach the eternal Kingdom. It is the same with us. If we follow
Jesus by putting God before everything and treating others as we want to be
treated, the Kingdom is ours forever.