[written 3/6/20]

Whoever is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment. (Matthew 5:22)
Now, injustice naturally makes us human beings angry. If we saw an injustice, and didn’t get angry about it, that would indicate that our souls have fallen into a nearly lifeless state.
Also: the world abounds with injustice. It’s a fallen world. Some people try to act as if we live on some dream planet, where everything is hunky dory and nice. And when they carry on like that, it’s enough to make a person angry.
So, are we totally stuck? On the one hand: Reality, dripping with injustices, each of which make any healthy human soul angry. On the other hand, the incarnate Son of God saying: ‘You’re liable to judgment for harboring anger against your brother in your heart.’
How can we resolve this? There’s only one way.
His countrymen convicted Him of blasphemy. The colonial governor wrongly condemned Him to death, knowing full well that the sentence did not fit the situation at all. The soldiers brutalized Him mercilessly. They stretched out His arms and nailed Him on the cross to die. Nothing more wrong, nothing more unjust has every happened.
He said…
Father, forgive them. They know not what they do.
Now, only God knows the full contours of the vision of reality that the Lord Jesus had in His mind when He said that. We can say this much about what He hand in His mind: He knew that He offered Himself as a perfectly innocent victim of the injustice of the world, in order to reconcile the sinful human race with our Maker. In order to bring about peace between heaven and earth. To reconcile the cosmos, and bring everything back into harmony.
He alone can give us our own little share in that vision of total reconciliation. When He does give us that insight, by the power of His grace, then we forget our quarrels. We take steps to restore relationships. We live as humble participants in the much-bigger reality. That is, the reality of Jesus Christ saving us sinners from everlasting sin.
We all have that in common, the mystery of salvation. And it looms much larger than the little beefs we have among ourselves.
We can’t escape the judgment we deserve for falling into unjust anger over the injustices we witness and suffer. We can’t do that on our own. Without a share in the mystery of the mind of Christ on the cross, it’s hopeless.
But: With Christ crucified, we can. We can learn to forgive. We can find the path to peace with any fellow sinner.
But God is faithful, faithful to His promises and His covenant. He did not vanish from the life of His chosen spouse. He stayed close. He continued to guide His people into a better future. The nation had abandoned God, but the story of love and friendship between God and man was not over.
Easy. When I’m honest, humble, and full of trust in God.
Not that we never have a right to get angry or to judge anything. Injustice will anger us. Someone punches you in the face, you get angry. And if someone does you wrong, and a remedy for the wrong stands available for you to pursue, you pursue it. Calmly, according to law.
The answer resounds right in front of our noses. “The chalice of My Blood, the blood of the new and eternal covenant.” We do not go too far when we say: Our religion is the Mass.
But: We can eat bacon-wrapped shrimp. And we regard circumcision as a medical matter, not a religious one. And we don’t have to wail at the Wailing Wall. And we’re not still waiting for the Messiah to make Himself known.
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Now, Who must this man be, Jesus, to issue such commands? No human being ever made the sun rise, or prevented its rising. No human being has ever known better than God when it should rain, or when it should stop raining.
Before the game, though, let’s turn inward. Who calls him- or herself a disciple of Christ?
But we see light. At Mass at St. Andrew’s, we find ourselves in a shiny, sparkling, gaudy building–and right in the center, with every architectural line converging on it–is the rendition of a crucified man. And to us, this is the brightest light of all, the shiniest part of the beautiful building. This is our God. His light, altogether invisible to every eye but the eye of faith–His light shines brighter than any other light. The Passion, darker than any Hollywood horror movie–and yet we see the Light of the World shining.
Let’s meditate on what Lord Jesus means. He follows His command for us to love our enemies with the assertion that the Father shines His sun on the just and unjust alike, and pours rain on good and bad.