Dai­ly Reflec­tion
June 18, 2007

Monday of the Eleventh week in Ordi­nary Time
Lectionary: 366
Edward Morse

Today’s scrip­tures remind us that our faith can be strength­ened and con­firmed in our response to events, which we might oth­er­wise not pre­fer to experience.

Dur­ing the sum­mer before I entered the sev­enth grade, our fam­i­ly farm was hit by a tor­na­do. Mirac­u­lous­ly, no peo­ple or live­stock were hurt, but our barns and silos were flat­tened and our farm­stead was cov­ered with twist­ed wreck­age. It all hap­pened in the evening, just before dark. Our cat­tle were scat­tered in the tall corn­fields, and we all spent a rest­less evening until day­light came. Then some­thing inter­est­ing hap­pened: neigh­bors and friends arrived – more than fifty of them – to help us clean up. This expe­ri­ence demon­strat­ed the pow­er of liv­ing in a com­mu­ni­ty of com­pas­sion and con­cern. With­out our need, we would not have expe­ri­enced such an out­pour­ing of support.

The nat­ur­al world some­times pro­vides puz­zle­ment about impor­tant con­cepts like jus­tice and good­ness. Today’s Gospel reminds us that the rain falls and the sun shines on both the just and the unjust, the bad and the good. Rather than sin­gling out per­sons accord­ing to mer­it, the nat­ur­al world reflects an order in which peo­ple are some­times treat­ed well or poor­ly with anonymi­ty. We get good gifts (like rain or sun) or harsh ones (like severe storms), with­out any appar­ent con­nec­tion to what we deserve (or think we deserve). But our faith may indeed be con­firmed and strength­ened in our response to those gifts.

In today’s first read­ing, the church­es of Mace­do­nia pro­vide an exam­ple of a peo­ple who expe­ri­enced tri­als and suf­fer­ing. Although some might be seduced into look­ing at pover­ty or suf­fer­ing as a sign of dis­fa­vor from God, the Mace­do­nians did not see it this way. Their response became a source of inspi­ra­tion and faith. Paul saw the sig­nif­i­cance of their gen­eros­i­ty in the face of suffering.

In the Gospel, Jesus’ teach­ing about our response to ene­mies also calls us to exhib­it an extra­or­di­nary response. When oth­ers are behav­ing with antag­o­nism and enmi­ty toward us, the nat­ur­al response is not love and under­stand­ing – at least mine is not. Jesus’ call to respond with love and prayer is a tall order indeed. When mis­treat­ed, my nat­ur­al ten­den­cy is to lick my wounds and rehearse the wrong I have expe­ri­enced. I try to reas­sure myself that the per­pe­tra­tors are bad peo­ple, that I am not like them, and that I don’t deserve this treat­ment. All of that may or may not be true in a par­tic­u­lar case, but it miss­es the point. We need to look beyond the event to our response to gauge its sig­nif­i­cance in our lives.

I find that the chal­lenge to love my ene­mies and to be gen­er­ous in the face of dif­fi­cul­ty is more than I can do on my own. All too often, I know that I need more prayer and more grace to gen­er­ate the reac­tion that Jesus calls us to have. But I also know that no oth­er approach real­ly brings peace or satisfaction.

Edward Morse

Pro­fes­sor of Law, McGrath North Endowed Chair

Ed Morse is a pro­fes­sor of law who holds the McGrath North Endowed Chair in busi­ness law at Creighton. Uni­ver­si­ty School of Law. He and his wife Susan are Catholic con­verts. Togeth­er, they oper­ate a fam­i­ly cat­tle farm in rur­al West­ern Iowa.

Writ­ing these reflec­tions over the past fif­teen years has helped me to learn and grow in faith.  Some­times it has also chas­tened me by remind­ing me of the con­stant need to prac­tice what we have learned as we live out our faith jour­ney togeth­er. I am grate­ful for feed­back and encour­age­ment from my fel­low travelers.