Gospel: Matthew 6: 1-6, 16-18
In our modern age we cannot even have dinner without taking a selfie and posting it to social media to show everyone what we are eating. Why we think this is important is elusive to reason, but we persist in the practice. The modern age is one of omnipresent media and self-promotion. Social media gives us the opportunity to create an array of personae, all of them false, to display to the world. We become a vast array of AI identities that are ironically self-created.
So come we now to the core Christian activities of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Public prayer is itself a competitive sport, with categories for length, cadence, and eloquence, not to mention the vast array of religious costume to accompany it. Ash Wednesday did not occur if we did not post a selfie with ashes and an account of our Lenten fasts. And who can resist a photo with a big check showing how much we gave to a cause or raised for our parish? We are awash in self promotion in the very things we ought not.
Here again we have convinced ourselves that Jesus is talking about other people and not us. And herein lies a subtle Anti-Semitism for the other people we think Jesus is talking about are Jewish. Not us Christians. We think what we do above doesn't apply. But it does. Today is a day for us to do away with the selfie, with the self-promotion, and the need to be seen. Today is a day for us to do the work of the kingdom solely because it is good and not for self-gain or our egos.