The Gospel for the Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity is from St. Matthew 22:34-46. These verses contain what seem to be two very distinctive interactions between Jesus Christ and the Pharisees. Yet, upon closer consideration, one can easily see why these two encounters belong together. The question and answer about the Great Commandments show the common heritage between Pharisaic Judaism and Jesus and His followers. Loving the Lord God comes first, immediately followed by loving one's neighbor. That is a significant agreement.
However, such a general agreement is only part of the story There are still very important differences between Jesus and other religious leaders. There are underlying questions about who God is and who the neighbor is. In the second part of today's Gospel, Jesus raises the question about the nature of God and His work by speaking of the Messiah or Christ. Jesus refers to Psalm 110 to suggest to the Pharisees that the Messiah shares the divine nature, and they are at a loss for words. He uses principles of interpretation that they accept, but they cannot affirm what He implies.
In fact, Jesus highlights the great difference between all humanistic religions and the true Christian understanding of faith. The key issue is about the unique person and nature of Jesus the Christ. In other words, is Jesus Christ the divine Son of God, the eternal Word incarnate? If one follows Christ, the answer is yes, and that answer changes the underlying meaning of the two Great Commandments. If Jesus is who He says He is throughout the Gospels, loving the Lord God also means loving Jesus Christ and following Him. In addition, Christian faith changes the meaning of loving the neighbor. It means loving all people created in God's image, especially those who believe in Jesus Christ.
So let us avoid bland modernistic interpretations of the two Great Commandments. They are not merely broad encouragements to be nice or respectable. The Gospel gives the Commandments a Christian context. They are meant to be applied in light of Jesus' teachings and in light of Jesus' unique identity as the Son of God.
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