Friends, in today’s Gospel Jesus commands us to stop judging others. He asks, "Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye, but do not perceive the wooden
beam in your own eye?" We are exceptionally good at seeing the fault in others, but we are exceptionally adept at ignoring it in ourselves.
There was a very popular book that came out when I was a teenager. It was called, I’m Okay and You’re Okay.
It represented the culture of exculpation and feel-good-about-yourself.
Some years ago, Christina Aguilera crooned, "I am beautiful in every
single way and words can’t bring me down." Look at so many of the
debates today: the attitude that is winning is one of self-invention and
self-assertion. Who are you to tell me how to behave?
In
all of this, we are fundamentally looking away from our guilt, our
fault, our darkness. We are effectively drugging ourselves, dulling the
pain of real self-consciousness. In the process, we turn ourselves into
God, pretending to be absolute, flawless, and impervious to criticism.
So "remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter from your brother’s eye."
Monday of the Twelfth Week in Ordinary Time
Lectionary: 371
Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, occupied the whole land
and attacked Samaria, which he besieged for three years.
In the ninth year of Hoshea, king of Israel
the king of Assyria took Samaria,
and deported the children of Israel to Assyria,
setting them in Halah, at the Habor, a river of Gozan,
and the cities of the Medes.
This came about because the children of Israel sinned against the LORD,
their God, who had brought them up from the land of Egypt,
from under the domination of Pharaoh, king of Egypt,
and because they venerated other gods.
They followed the rites of the nations
whom the LORD had cleared out of the way of the children of Israel
and the kings of Israel whom they set up.
And though the LORD warned Israel and Judah
by every prophet and seer,
"Give up your evil ways and keep my commandments and statutes,
in accordance with the entire law which I enjoined on your fathers
and which I sent you by my servants the prophets,"
they did not listen, but were as stiff-necked as their fathers,
who had not believed in the LORD, their God.
They rejected his statutes,
the covenant which he had made with their fathers,
and the warnings which he had given them, till,
in his great anger against Israel,
the LORD put them away out of his sight.
Only the tribe of Judah was left.
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