Brothers
and sisters, rejoice.
Mend your ways, encourage one another,
agree with one another, live in peace,
and the God of love and peace will be with you.
Mend your ways, encourage one another,
agree with one another, live in peace,
and the God of love and peace will be with you.
This is the challenge St. Paul puts to us today from
his 2nd letter to the Corinthians, chapter 13, verse 1, and
following. When he says, “mend your
ways,” he is asking us to be united with one another in purpose, unity, and
love. There must have been some tension
or even sin amongst the peoples at that time, there are always squabbles,
differences, and fights breaking out among us since the dawn of day and yet St.
Paul says, “fix it.” But not just fix
it, but also to encourage one another, agree with one another, and live in
peace.
God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit
is One God, united in perfection, a perfect relationship, but also perfect
love, therefore the three are one. In
marriage, we hope that the two become one, not just in the flesh but in their
love. There are still two people there
but in their perfect love for one another they are one. An analogy for the Trinity, not a perfect
one, but one that helps us to understand the Trinity. Regarding St. Paul’s challenge, it should
also be a model for our unity.
The question for us becomes, “are we living in peace
with one another?” This question can be
asked on all levels, i.e. is there peace in my family, is there peace in my
community, my nation, or in the world?
When we turn on the news, it does not seem that we are in peace, either
as a nation or internationally, since we are divided sharply down the middle and we also have
great tensions between other nations, is it always the other guy’s fault? Is America always right, always perfect,
never wrong at all? How about within my
own family, am I always right and the other person wrong? Is it always their fault?
If there is tension, fighting, divisions, are
they always the cause of someone else, or am I responsible for that fighting to some extent? There can be no peace, no unity, no love,
until one humbles themselves, for pride is the root of all sin. And it is pride that blinds one from their
own guilt. St. Paul’s challenge can only
be achieved with the virtue of humility.
God himself became humble when he became man, he humbled himself out of
love, love for us, and he was \ is perfect.
You and I are not perfect so we should humble ourselves the more. Because when we do we know that God of peace
and love is with us.
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