Romans 2 : 1-11
Luke 11 : 42-46
A common situation exists where there are leaders and followers, or superiors and subordinates, or teachers and students.
It may be in an organization, or workplace or classroom or even in church.
Whether the person up in the front is a superior or a manager or a teacher or a priest, he/she will treat those under his/her charge differently.
For whatever reason, some will be treated with favour, some will be treated indifferently, some will just be overlooked.
That is understandable when we look at it from the perspective of relational chemistry.
So we have to admit that we are partial and biased in varying degrees.
We often look at people with different and arbitrary standards.
This can be detrimental in situations where the "favoured" people get away with something that others will be severely punished for.
The last line of the 1st reading says that God has no favourites. That means God is impartial, that He loves everyone regardless of whether they are clever or attractive or influential or otherwise.
That does not mean that we cannot have close friends or talk more with people that we can easily relate with.
It means that with those whom we can't easily relate with or even dislike, we still must treat them with fairness and not to impose on them unendurable burdens of mind and heart.
Especially when we are the superiors.