FIRST READING
God allows us to make choices, but we are not to choose injustice or sinfulness ~ Sirach 15:15–20 ~
The attainment of wisdom is Sirach’s primary theme in this passage. The first step toward wisdom is to fear the Lord, that is, to reject sin. This passage addresses the Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time year A • We've provided reflections for each reading on the following pages. Read these in advance; they'll give you additional insights for understanding and discussion. • Depending on when your group meets and how much time you have, you may want to read through each reading from the Prayer Journal together before beginning lectio divina. freedom we have to adhere to that law of God which leads to true wisdom—or not. We’re free to choose, but Sirach makes it clear that the choice isn’t equally weighted on both sides. You might say that we're free to choose but not free to sin.
Our choice isn’t an arbitrary one in which good or evil are merely neutral alternatives. Obedience to the law leads to life, and disobedience to death. Righteousness conforms to our nature, made by the all-wise God, and lawlessness causes our very nature to decay. We may be free to choose to sin, but our freedom isn’t a permission to sin, as is sometimes thought today. Sirach says that freedom is only ennobling when it’s exercised in pursuit of wisdom through adherence to the Law of the Covenant. The gift of freedom can’t be understood apart from the Giver. Sin is exactly a violation of our freedom because it leads to the ultimate slavery— death. Our ability to choose to sin should never be misunderstood to be a “freedom to sin.”
We can only imagine the flame that the realization of God’s plan in Christ sparked in St. Paul. He entirely poured himself out in the service of the Gospel. We Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time year A can see a glimpse of Paul’s goal in the description of the Beatific Vision of Heaven he gives us: “Eye has not seen and ear has not heard, and what has not entered the human heart what God has prepared for those who love him.” It’s somehow fitting that the mysterious plan of God should have a mysterious goal.
As we begin to draw back the curtain on the Christian mystery by our participation in the liturgy, the reading of Scripture, private prayer, and works of mercy, we find that as the mystery of Christ’s life begins to take shape in our souls, the mysterious life of Heaven begins to sprout there, too. It’s out of this kind of experience that St. Paul speaks in this passage. Owing to his direct participation in the plan of God, the mystery of Christ wasn’t merely a goal, but the a wisdom that Paul carried around with him. He drew from this inner wellspring when he shared the revelation of the mysterious plan of God that we call the Gospel.
Matthew shows us that Jesus understood himself to be an important instrument in God’s plan for the future of Israel and the Gentiles as well. In this passage, Jesus explains that his intention isn’t to abolish all that has preceded him in God’s revelation to the Jewish people, particularly the laws given through Moses. Rather, he has “come not to abolish, but to fulfill” Jesus’s position on the Law is perfectly in concert with both his divine nature and his human nature. He will fulfill, not abolish, all that has gone before.
He shows us just what he means by giving a list of particular references to murder, adultery, divorce, and false witness. In each case, with one exception, he doesn’t abolish what went before. On the contrary, he strengthens the requirement, placing a deeper obligation on the Christian disciple than the Mosaic Law had done on the Jew. We see Jesus not only acting as the new Moses, but correcting Moses and speaking on behalf of God’s original design. In Matthew, Jesus isn’t merely a new Moses but the God who spoke to Moses. It’s in this capacity that he fulfills the Law by calling the disciple, not merely to obedience, but also to a deeper, more obedient love.
Jesus says, “Therefore, if you bring your gift to that altar, and there recall that your brother has anything against you, leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift.” What goes through your mind when you hear these words? Is there someone with whom you need to reconcile? Is there something you need to do to make amends? Let Jesus bring to mind what it is he would have you do.
If a person or situation came to mind as you were praying, decide what you can do this week to be reconciled. List the steps you will need to take to accomplish this