Thirty First Ordinary Sunday Year B
In
the 4th century, St. Augustine offered advice that looks like something one
would find in Playboy or Cosmopolitan: "Love – and do what
you will." Sounds like a rallying cry for mayhem and debauchery. To be
fair, it sounds more refine in the original Latin, “Dilige et quod vis fac”. (Ok, I may be wrong) Our initial reaction may
be one of shock because the quote does seem to be more at home with the libertine
period now popularly known as the hippie era, where you would find many
advocates of the sexual revolution chanting the slogan associated with the
anti-Vietnam war sentiments of the 60s and 70s, “Make Love! Not War!” It was
the age of ‘free love’. Anarchy and love do seem to hit it off right from the
start.
The ‘Free
Love’ movement’s initial goal was to separate the state from sexual matters
such as marriage, birth control, and adultery. The movement saw marriage as a
form of social bondage. According to this concept, all free unions of adults
are legitimate and no one has the right to interfere or impose any moral
restraint on matters of the heart, even if it involved promiscuous lifestyles, swapping
partners, same-sex relationships, etc. It claimed that such issues were the
concern of the parties involved, and no one else. In other words, morality is a private matter. The
movement sought freedom from state regulation and church interference in personal
relationships. Love and the law were seen as irreconcilable opposite ends of
the spectrum and one should never try to make them unwilling bed partners. It
is interesting to note that the arguments used by the ‘Free Love’ movement have
not become passé with the demise of the hippie era. Today, the same arguments
in favour of or against have been resurrected in the run-up to the present presidential
elections in the U.S.A.
Did
St Augustine, one the greatest doctors of the Church, actually give his stamp
of approval to free love? To argue that he did would be really stretching it,
given the fact that Augustine had personally turned his back on such a free
lifestyle which he had prior to his conversion to Christianity. He lived with a
woman in concubinage for many years and even had a child out of wedlock. In his
early years, he followed his father to frequent brothels. He finally saw the
error of his ways when he came to discover the true love of his life, the
Beauty ever ancient, Christ Himself. Here is a more extended quote from the great
homily on the First Letter of St John: “The deeds of men are only discerned by
the root of charity. For many things may be done that have a good appearance,
and yet proceed not from the root of charity… Once for all, then, a short
precept is given thee: Love, and do what thou wilt: whether thou hold thy
peace, through love hold thy peace; whether thou cry out, through love cry out;
whether thou correct, through love correct; … let the root of love be within,
of this root can nothing spring but what is good.” (Homily VII, paragraph 8) The
context clarifies the meaning of the quote: love should never be an excuse to justify
any action, all and sundry, or a license to live immorally. On the contrary, St
Augustine was insisting that love must be the foundation of every action and
decision. If love was truly the basis of our actions, then we would not risk
sinning.
St Augustine
uses a metaphor derived from family life to further elucidate his point. He observes
that if a person had to choose between being chastised and being treated
affectionately, everyone would pick the latter. Nevertheless, suppose the
punishment comes from a boy’s father and the caress comes from a kidnapper. “In
that case,” he says, “it is Love which disciplines and iniquity which
caresses.” Love does not necessarily mean that you make the other person feel
good. First and foremost, it requires that your actions flow from a right
relationship with that person and with God. If that is the case, says
Augustine, “Love and do what you will.”
One
of the most challenging expressions of love today is to correct someone else
who has done wrong. No one enjoys being corrected – and few people enjoy
correcting others. It requires tact, patience, prayer, courage, humility and
perseverance. But St Augustine reminds us that the most important ingredient is
love. Political correctness, however, has distorted our understanding of love.
Our truncated notion of love is confined to kindly feelings and being nice. If
I am ‘nice’ or benevolent toward others, it was interpreted as fulfilling the
command of love. Don’t get me wrong. Kindly feelings are important and we
should do everything we can to cultivate them. You can and you should develop
affection for others, even those who seem unlovable. Nevertheless, as
Augustine’s example illustrates, much more than benevolence is required. Love
is not just about being nice and courteous. A kidnapper may feel kindly towards
his victim, but no one can claim that he truly loves the child.
A
distorted notion of love got us – and a lot of others – into trouble. We think
that love demands us to withhold the truth. We think that being loving means
learning how to tip toe around difficult issues and avoid contentious ones,
like sin, salvation, and repentance. We started making a list of words to throw
out of our vocabulary – first there was ‘hell’, then there was ‘sin’ and before
you know it God got thrown out too! But real love involves a daily examination
of conscience; not just warm mushy feelings, but the avoidance of sin and
cultivation of positive habits. Ultimately, real love must be founded on Truth
and in service of Truth. Love is never about selling a lie just to ensure that
feelings are not hurt and relationships are not spoiled. Truth should never be
sacrificed at the altar of good relations.
The
problem with our modern times is that we have come to understand law and love
as antithetical. Many believe that to follow the law is to be under a burden,
to be compelled, to be constrained. To love, on the other hand, is to embrace
the capacity to choose, to be creative, to be liberated. Moral and religious
norms are seen as archaic and even anti-love. Many in our Church seems to have
been affected by this same malaise in the last fifty years. Our Holy Father,
Pope Benedict XVI made this observation in an interview with the Papal
biographer, Peter Seewald when asked to comment on the lack of action taken
against clergy sexual offenders in the past: “the prevailing mentality was that
the Church must not be a Church of laws but, rather, a Church of love; she must
not punish. Thus the awareness that punishment can be an act of love ceased to
exist. This led to an odd darkening of the mind, even in very good people.” The
Pope then proposed: “Today we have to learn all over again that love for the
sinner and love for the person who has been harmed are correctly balanced if I
punish the sinner in the form that is possible and appropriate.”
It
is only when love is founded in the truth can love finally reveal its most
profound meaning. Love is the other name we give to God, as St John so firmly
affirmed in his first letter, “God is Love”. God is Truth and God is Love. In
God, we see the harmony of his law and his love. God’s law is an expression of
his love. That is why Jesus frames his greatest teaching in the form of a legal
injunction – Love is a Commandment. Love is the Law and the law is love. There
is no contradiction. The Law is a guide that helps man on the path of life to salvation,
it is the means by which man is released from the slavery of selfishness and
sin and introduced to true freedom and life. Our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI
made this profound point during an Angelus catechesis. “For this reason, in the
Bible, the Law is not seen as a burden, an overwhelming limitation, but as the
Lord’s most precious gift, the testimony of his fatherly love, of his desire to
be close to his people, to be their ally and write with his people a love
story.” Love, and do what you will … because when love is true, there you will find
God’s will, not just a feeble version of our own design, a sorry excuse for
immorality.
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