Catholic Mass Readings and Reflection August 22, 2025

By CL

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Catholic Mass Readings and Reflection August 22, 2025

First Reading: Ruth 1:1, 3-6, 14b-16, 22

Psalm 146:5-6ab, 6c-7, 8-9a, 9bc-10 (R. 1b)

R/. My soul, give praise to the Lord!

Gospel Acclamation

V/. Alleluia

R/. Alleluia

V/. Teach me your paths, O Lord. Guide me in your truth.

R/. Alleluia

Gospel: Matthew 22:34-40

At that time: When the Pharisees heard that Jesus had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together. And one of them, a lawyer, asked him a question to test him. “Teacher, which is the great commandment in the Law?” And he said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbour as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.”

Daily Gospel Reflection

1. A lawyer in the gospel asks Jesus a question, “What is the greatest commandment in the law?” Jesus’ answer is Love. It is double-packed: love for God and love for the neighbour. It is a love for God with the totality of the person, that is, heart and soul, and mind.

2. Therefore, we should love God with all and the fullness of our faculties. There cannot be portions or fractions, or conditions or concessions. It is to love God without measure or reserve. It means that God becomes our all and our whole.

3. This means that God becomes our topmost priority. He is not a mere abstract concept, not an idea or issue about which we have some knowledge. God is not merely an intellectual concern.

4. God becomes a concern of life, someone very personal, someone for whom we nurture profound feelings and sentiments, someone with whom we relate passionately and intimately. Thus, God becomes a vital concern of emotion, experience, relation, and commitment.

5. This invites us then to check our frequent tendencies to make God more an object of devotion and religious activities. Instead, we must discover and experience Him as a subject who loves us and needs to be loved.

6. As long as God is treated as an alien and pushed out of the inner circles of the heart and the territories of life, love for God will remain only shallow and fail to affect us.

7. The commandment of love will be incomplete if we close it only with love for God. It necessarily opens up to love for the neighbour. Love for God never encloses itself within itself. It is not an individual affair with God.

8. Rather, love for God finds its concrete expression in love for neighbour. A love for God that does not lead one to love for neighbour is shallow and can even be a farce. This love for neighbour must be such that it loves the other as one loves his own self. In other words, in a true love of neighbour, there is no ego, no ego-interests. It is selfless.

9. In Ruth in the first reading, we find this beautiful combination of love for God and love for the other. Though a Moabitess, she owns up to God and the family of the Hebrew Naomi, her mother-in-law. Even after her husband’s death, she clings to her. See her words: “For where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God my God”.

10. The queenship of Mary that we celebrate today is a beautiful example of perfect love, blending love for God and others. As queen, she watches over us benevolently, constantly leading us by hand. Her queenship also assures us that we, too, share the same glory if we follow the same way of life.

Catholic Leaf is website that provides Sundays and Weekdays catholic reflections. Please use catholic leaf as a tool for preparing your Homily.