Gospel
text (Luke 7,31-35):
The Lord said, «What comparison can I use for this people? What are they like?
They are like children sitting in the marketplace, about whom their companions
complain: ‘We piped you a tune and you wouldn't dance; we sang funeral songs
and you wouldn't cry’. Remember John: he didn't eat bread or drink wine, and
you said: ‘He has an evil spirit’. Next came the Son of Man, eating and
drinking, and you say: ‘Look, a glutton for food and wine, a friend of tax
collectors and sinners’. But the children of Wisdom always recognize her work».
It is often found commentaries that describe common good as extremes of anarchy, as expressions that on one end present a justification for system interference and on the other as an idea of omnipotence over the people who is typically labeled as mediocre and incapable of deciding on their own about their matters and circumstances. However, common good is divine a mandate we all have as individuals; to aim for and to work towards. It is what defines the relationship between science and reason, because a science where its object is to benefit only the self or to enhance the egos of the recipients is what defies reason and so it segregates itself from faith which is what make us creatures of God with dignity, identity and individuality because care exists for our neighbor and peer. Common good cannot be taking or confiscating from some to give to others or to pretend that by robbing from the ones that have to presumably give to the have not, the issue is fairly addressed. On the contra...
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