but whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” – Mt 23:12
“Make justice your aim: redress the wronged, hear the orphan’s plea, defend the widow.” - Is 1:17
“Make justice your aim: redress the wronged, hear the orphan’s plea, defend the widow.” - Is 1:17
Both the Jewish and Christian traditions imagine a God who stands
with the poor and the powerless. Jesus shows a clear referential option or love
for the poor. Outreach to the marginalized and opposing injustices are not
extra expressions of faith, they are integral to our embrace of God’s
love.
The Lenten call to repentance consists of reconciliation, a
bringing together. Bringing together how we practice and what we preach;
closing the gap between “the haves” and the “haves not”; embracing our identity
in God’s unconditional love and letting go of a sense of self that comes from
possessions, prestige, power, or entitlement; allowing God to heal us and going
beyond ourselves to serve the least among us. While we serve, we realize the
Pharisees within each of us: we serve and redress wrong from a place of power
and privilege; we “stand over” people; we are often motivated more by the need
to be recognized or liked by others than the desire to honor God. At the same
time, we realize the call to “stand with” those we serve, to face our illusions
of control, to share in our common poverty – our utter need for God’s healing
and mercy. Jesus calls us to servant leadership so that we may be embraced by
God’s reconciling love as we serve and stand with the poor.
“Lord, help me to concretely embrace your love by standing on the
side of the poor and powerless.”
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