Daily
Reflection
From a Creighton Student's Perspective
February
11th, 2008
by
Sam Pierre
Junior – Pre Med majoring in Psychology and Spanish
Today’s first reading explains, in typical Old Testament fashion, how we are not supposed to lead our lives. While the list that God gave Moses is necessary and important, it provides no explanation of how to act, simply how not to act. This certainly contrasts the Gospel reading, in which Jesus outlines what defines those that will join him in Heaven and those that will not. In Jesus’ explanation he does not say that those who receive eternal life are those who commit the fewest number of sins, rather he points out the good that we should do throughout our lives. I often think about what I do for God as needing to be monumental or life-changing in some way. This list of good deeds that I deem as pleasing to God is often fairly limited and consists of praying, reading the Bible, attending Mass, or helping someone understand Catholicism. In today’s Gospel, Jesus certainly discredits my relatively incorrect theory. While all those activities that I listed are fantastic ways of growing in one's faith and bringing others closer to God, Jesus tells how any small deed done for the least of his people is, in effect, done to him. I absolutely love how Jesus’ instruction invites us to seek God in those people around us. The fascinating fact that underlies Jesus’ teaching in the Gospel is that we can encounter God in other people. No, this does not mean that each person embodies or is God, however God is present in all things and people because he is the origin of their existence, similar to how an artist is present in his artwork. Jesus encourages us to welcome, care for, and fulfill the basic needs of other people as if we were doing the deed for God himself. The other side of Jesus’ teaching explains that the love or physical care withheld from another person is also withheld from God. Remembering that anything I do for or to another person is essentially done also to God definitely makes me think twice about the way I act in that other person’s presence. If we all remembered this Gospel reading at the beginning of each day, how many of our world’s problems would disappear due to the simple desire to treat those around us the same way we would treat God himself? Let’s accept Jesus’ invitation and strive to seek God in everyone around us throughout our daily lives. |
Collaborative Ministry Office Guestbook