Our blessed Lord began His public life
on the Mount of the Beatitudes, by preaching, ‘Blessed are the meek: for they shall
possess the earth.’ He finished His public life on the hill of Calvary by practising
that meekness: ‘Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.’
Fulton J. Sheen
The Cross and the Beatitudes, 1937: 3
It is probably a good thing that Our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ was not an advertising executive. Fundamentally
He tells it like it is – there is a simplicity and a directness to Him that is
not always comfortable. He does not tell us what we want to hear, but rather he
tells us what we need to hear, which is often far from pleasant or comfortable.
He has been teaching in the Temple, about the Kingdom of God, and how to live
out the faith in our lives and now He turns to the future.
The
Temple was the single most important place on Earth for religious Jews, it was
the centre of their life; it was where they came close to God. The prospect of
its destruction was surely the most dreadful prospect, something not to be
countenanced at all. Yet it would happen, and rather than hide behind the false
hope of a pleasant image, he teaches people the plain unvarnished truth. Rather
than a sugar-coated pill he gives us a bitter draught, so that we can be
prepared.
False
teaching is always a possibility for the Church – people want to pervert the
Gospel, to twist it for their own ends and to suit their own agenda – it is
happening now, and has always happened. We need, therefore to be vigilant, to
know what we believe and why, so that we can discern the true from the false,
the good from the bad.
In
human terms the future looks bleak – human beings have an immense capacity for
doing the wrong thing, and yet in the midst of all this we know whom we can
trust, whom we can look to, where we can place our hope and our confidence. The
possibility of being tortured or killed for professing faith in Jesus Christ is
still very real, here and now, in the world in which we live. It’s a deeply
unpleasant thought, and while none of us I suspect would like to undergo such
treatment, we have to be prepared for the possibility, we have to be willing to
stand up and be counted, to know that we place Christ before and above all
things.
At
one level it is quite understandable, what Christ stands for, what we stand
for: love, forgiveness, selflessness, are never going to be popular in a world
obsessed by power. But we’re not here to win a popularity contest, but rather
to bear witness to the truth of Christ, and to know that we are set free by it.
The love of many may grow cold; indeed it has, so we need to be that love in
the world to make Christ known and to call others into His loving embrace.
Against a human nature which takes a perverse delight in selfishness and sin,
in not living how God wants us to, we need to take a stand.
Fundamentally
the calling to be a saint is there for each and every one of us. We are called
to be like Christ, and through our baptism to die to the ways of the world and
live for him. In our baptism we are given the grace of God and His Holy Spirit,
we are given all that we need to get to Heaven, because Christ loves us, and
gave Himself to die for us, to take away our sins, to show us what love and
forgiveness really look like, so that we can do the same.
On
our own, each one of us individually doesn’t stand much of a chance, it’s too
difficult, it’s not how it is supposed to be, rather we need to live out our
faith together, as a community of believers, helping each other, supporting
each other, praying for and forgiving each other, being built up in love
together, so that together we can truly be the people of God, forgiving each
other, loving each other, and helping to make the Kingdom a reality here and
now.
We
come to be nourished by Him, to be fed by the Word of God, nourished in our
faith, to be fed with His Body and Blood, to be given a foretaste of heaven,
fed by Him, fed with Him, to be built up in love together, strengthened and
nourished to live out our common calling to sainthood, and to encourage others
to join us, as this is what God wants us to do – this is life in all its fullness,
following the Truth which sets us free from the ways of the world – its selfishness,
its lust for power and control, its fear and anger, all those things which separate
us from God and each other.
So
let us come to Him, let our lives be transformed by Him, so that we can live
out our faith together, in our common calling, and encourage others so to do,
so that they too may believe and give Glory to God the Father, God the Son, and
God the Holy Spirit, to whom be ascribed as is most right and just all might,
majesty, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever.
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