Friday, January 25, 2013
420. What is the New Law or the Law of the Gospel? (part 1)
(Comp 420) The New Law or the Law of the
Gospel, proclaimed and fulfilled by Christ, is the fullness and completion of
the divine law, natural and revealed. It is summed up in the commandment to love
God and neighbor and to love one another as Christ loved us. It is also an
interior reality: the grace of the Holy Spirit which makes possible such love.
It is “the law of freedom” (Galatians 1:25) because it inclines us to act
spontaneously by the prompting of charity.
“The New Law is mainly the same grace of the Holy Spirit which is
given to believers in Christ.” (Saint Thomas Aquinas)
“In brief”
(CCC 1985) The New Law is a law of love, a law of grace, a
law of freedom. (CCC 1983 The New Law is the grace of the Holy Spirit received
by faith in Christ, operating through charity. It finds expression above all in
the Lord's Sermon on the Mount and uses the sacraments to communicate grace to
us.
To deepen and
explain
(CCC 1965) The New Law or the Law of the Gospel is the
perfection here on earth of the divine law, natural and revealed. It is the
work of Christ and is expressed particularly in the Sermon on the Mount. It is
also the work of the Holy Spirit and through him it becomes the interior law of
charity: "I will establish a New Covenant with the house of Israel…. I
will put my laws into their minds, and write them on their hearts, and I will
be their God, and they shall be my people" (Heb 8:8, 10; cf. Jer
31:31-34). (CCC 1966) The New Law is the grace
of the Holy Spirit given to the faithful through faith in Christ. It works
through charity; it uses the Sermon on the Mount to teach us what must be done
and makes use of the sacraments to give us the grace to do it: If anyone should
meditate with devotion and perspicacity on the sermon our Lord gave on the
mount, as we read in the Gospel of Saint Matthew, he will doubtless find there…
the perfect way of the Christian life…. This sermon contains ... all the
precepts needed to shape one's life (St. Augustine, De serm. Dom. 1, 1: PL 34, 1229-1230).
Reflection
(CCC 1967) The Law of the Gospel "fulfills,"
refines, surpasses, and leads the Old Law to its perfection (Cf. Mt 5:17-19).
In the Beatitudes, the New Law fulfills
the divine promises by elevating and orienting them toward the
"kingdom of heaven." It is addressed to those open to accepting this
new hope with faith - the poor, the humble, the afflicted, the pure of heart,
those persecuted on account of Christ - and so marks out the surprising ways of
the Kingdom. (CCC 1968) The Law of the Gospel fulfills the commandments of the Law. The Lord's Sermon on the
Mount, far from abolishing or devaluing the moral prescriptions of the Old Law,
releases their hidden potential and has new demands arise from them: it reveals
their entire divine and human truth. It does not add new external precepts, but
proceeds to reform the heart, the root of human acts, where man chooses between
the pure and the impure (Cf. Mt 15:18-19), where faith, hope, and charity are
formed and with them the other virtues. The Gospel thus brings the Law to its
fullness through imitation of the perfection of the heavenly Father, through
forgiveness of enemies and prayer for persecutors, in emulation of the divine
generosity (Cf. Mt 5:44,48). [IT
CONTINUES]
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