Saturday, February 22, 2025

Post-it Notes

 

7th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Cycle C

Have you ever wanted to change a behavior or correct a bad habit or fix a relationship, and you put a plan together to do so? Or have you ever wanted to grow in a virtue or nurture a good behavior? Do you hear today’s gospel and think, “I need to get better at doing these things”. I have, many times, and yet I always seem to fall back into the old behaviors and habits. My plans always fall short of my desires and expectations. It is very hard to teach an old dog new tricks.

 

My plans are always well thought out and elegant. I read lots of books and articles that give me the recipe for success, usually a bunch of things to do that would make me a great person. I write these tips on pieces of paper and tape them to the walls of my office or stick them in my bible or breviary. Sometimes I stick a post-it note on my computer screen with a virtue I want to cultivate. This month’s virtue is prudence. Then I make an effort to read them every morning or evening. The idea is that if I affirm them long enough they will seep into my psyche and I will change. My plans give me a sense of control. See, I’m doing something.

 

But invariably what happens is that eventually I stop seeing those pieces of paper on my wall and I go back to my more established, comfortable way of living, which is centered around me and what I want. I can never remember to do all those things. And it is mentally exhausting because I always have to be on guard. It is so much easier to just go with my instincts, so much easier to react rather than be proactive. And so it becomes a never-ending cycle and nothing much changes.

 

Jesus gives us his famous teaching about loving our neighbors today. We are all familiar with this passage. Love your enemies. Turn the other cheek. The Golden Rule. Judge not. Much of what it means to be a Christian disciple can be found here. They are behaviors we can emulate and strive to live by. They are all things we can post on our walls.  We can practice them in concrete ways. I can lend without expecting repayment. I can give to the poor. I can try not to be judgmental. See, Lord, I am giving it my best effort. I’m a good person because I am trying to be good.

 

The problem is, I think that too often we see these things as part of some spiritual self-help program. Just like me with my self-improvement plans, we see them as skills to develop, not ways of changing our world view for the better. And, if we see them simply as tasks to complete, eventually we lose interest in them. We only hear these words spoken every once in a while. We do not make them habits, part of our regular, comfortable way of doing things. How can we make the life-giving changes to our lives that will make us true disciples?

 

We need to find a way to start focusing not so much on the behaviors we want to foster in ourselves as on the people we need to love. We need to stop thinking in terms of all the things we need to do and start seeing people differently, as Jesus sees them. If you want long term behavior change, don’t change your attitudes, change how you see things. If you want better relationships with others, view them differently. Change your mindset and your point of view. The things you do will then naturally follow.

 

We too often see these teachings as being the thing, when they’re not the thing. They are only results of the thing. They are the things we do because of the real thing.

 

The real thing is people.

 

How we see people, how we think about people, how we treat people is directly related to who we think they are and how we see them in relation to ourselves. The reason we fail so often in living these teachings of Jesus is because we don’t see people the way Jesus sees them. Jesus did all these things: He fed the hungry, gave sight to the blind, cured the lame, gave to the poor, came not to judge but to show mercy. And I bet you he didn’t have to tape a list of these behaviors on his bedroom wall to remind him and help him get better. He did them because they were the natural result of how he viewed everyone he came in contact with. It was easy for him to do them because they were the direct outcomes of who he is and who we are. They are the direct outcomes of love.

 

And it should be easier for us to do also because of who we are and who He is. How many of you have children? As you raise them, do you ever think twice about feeding them, clothing them, giving them shelter, taking care of them when they are sick or hurt, consoling them when they are upset? Do you have to put up a list of these behaviors on the refrigerator next to their artwork to remind you how to act? Of course not. You do them easily and naturally and without complaint because you love your children. You want the best for them not because you want to be the best parent in the world, but because that’s what love is and what love does. We do these things for the ones we love easily and naturally, without planning or a second thought.

 

St. Augustine once said, “Love, then do as you will”. You cannot love outside of God, because God is love. Jesus acted the way he did because he is love itself. He could not act any other way. We are all called not just as disciples but as human beings to act out of love for one another. Augustine went on to preach, “If you hold your peace, hold your peace out of love. If you cry out, cry out in love. If you correct someone, correct them out of love. If you spare them, spare them out of love. Let the root of love be in you: nothing can spring from it but good.”

 

It really isn’t that hard to live out the teachings of the Lord. Just keep it simple. Hear the word of God in today’s readings and use those behaviors as measurements of how well you are loving. Don’t focus on the doing, focus on love. Get yourself out of the way and stop trying to force your behavior to change. If you strive to serve others out of love, you will do all those things Jesus asks of you, and more besides. See others as Jesus sees them, and you will treat them as Jesus treats them. See each and every person you come in contact with as having the worth and dignity of a beloved son or daughter of the Father, and your behavior towards them will follow.

 

And the best thing, by focusing on loving others, you will also be loved. You will get as good as you give.

 

Give, and gifts will be given to you;
a good measure, packed together, shaken down, and overflowing,
will be poured into your lap.

 

 

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