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Suggested Emphasis from the book of the prophet Isaiah
"Observe what is right, do what is just; for my salvation is about to come,
my justice, about to be revealed."
Salesian Perspective
Our God can be described in many
ways: a God of love; a God of peace; a God of life; a God of salvation; a God
of reconciliation; a God of peace.
And as the reading from Isaiah
reminds us, our God is also a God of justice. This means that God is just, that
God is fair. God is morally righteous. God is reasoned, reasonable and truthful.
God gives people their due.
We are made in the image and likeness
of God. To that end, like God, we, too, are called to be people of justice,
to give others their due.
Insofar as God calls us to live
justly, one of our greatest temptations is to act in an unjust manner, that
is, to live with "two hearts." In his Introduction to the Devout Life,
Francis de Sales wrote: "In general we prefer the rich to the poor...we even prefer
those who are better dressed. We rigorously demand our own rights, but want
others to be considerate in insisting on theirs. We complain easily about our
neighbors, but we would expect them to never complain about us. What we do for
others always seems so very great, but what others do for us seems like nothing
at all. In short, we have two hearts. We have a mild, gracious and courteous
attitude toward ourselves but an entirely different demeanor that is hard, severe
and unyielding toward others." (Part III, Chapter 36)
Francis de Sales challenged us
to "be just and equitable in all your actions. Always put yourself in your neighbors'
place and them in yours, and then you will live justly. Imagine yourself the
seller when you buy and the buyer when you sell and you will sell and buy justly...In
the end, we lose nothing by living generously, nobly, courteously and with a
royal, just and reasonable heart. Examine your heart frequently to see if it
is disposed toward your neighbor as you want your neighbor's heart to be disposed
toward you." (Ibid)
Justice, then, is not merely imitating
some remote, unachievable attribute. Justice must be the hallmark of all those
who wish to follow Jesus, who wish to live a devout life. It is, in truth, about
being more fully - and deeply - human. To the extent that we treat others as
we would want them to treat us - fairly, reasonably, rightly - we reveal something
of God's divine justice.
What better way to give what is due to God by giving what is due to one another?
Rev. Michael S. Murray, OSFS,
is Executive Director of the De Sales Spirituality Center in Washington, DC
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