It does not imply being a person obsessed with many commandments to be fulfilled, before which one can feel overwhelmed, but being a person in love who does everything with the joy of love.
Each of us knows well what it means to love ourselves and what we would like others to do for us. By adding these words, "as yourself," Jesus has placed before us a mirror before which we cannot lie; he has given us an infallible measure to discover whether or not we love our neighbor.
Therefore, whatever you would have men do to you, do also to them (Mt 7:12). It does not say, if you please: What the other does to you, do also to him. This would still be the law of retaliation: An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth (Dt 19:21). It says, rather: what you would like the other person to do to you, do to him/her.and that is quite different.
How many things would change in society if we would put into practice these words of Jesus! It is not so difficult to do so. It is enough to ask ourselves in every situation: if I were in his place and he were in mine, how would I want him to behave towards me?
The words and, above all, the example of Jesus in the Gospel invite us to think, to talk with him in our prayer and to draw consequences. Perhaps when we think of love of neighbor, the first thing we think of is to dedicate some of our spare time to an action of solidarity: accompanying an elderly person for a walk, comforting a sick personGiving alms, distributing food to those who have none, participating in a solidarity party... All this is good, but it is only a small beginning. It can even be an excuse to feel good with a good conscience.
The words of Jesus do not speak of external works of charity but of interior dispositions, essential in our relationships with others. To love, the first thing is to truly love people, to be interested in them, to build bridges of friendship, to share the best we have to offer: our joyful and operative faith, which manifests itself in deeds.
In short, do everything out of love: if you keep silent, keep silent out of love; if you speak, speak out of love; if you correct, correct out of love. Think first of others with true love and then concretize those good feelings in the way that can be most useful to each person.
It is about looking differently at the situations and people we encounter in order to live. How? With the gaze with which we would like God to look at usof excuse, of benevolence, of understanding, of forgiveness...!
Mr. Francisco Varo PinedaDirector of Research at the University of Navarra.
Faculty of Theology, professor of Sacred Scripture.