http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/060512.cfm
be eager to be
found without spot or blemish before him, at peace. And
consider the patience of our Lord as salvation.
When I wanted to make a difference I didn’t like passages such as this. It seemed too much about personal salvation and not
enough about making the world a better place. What would be the point of one
person being found pure and spotless and at peace if the rest of the world were
going to hell in a handbag?
Many years and several hard knocks later, I realize that I am
not going to leave the world a better place for having been here. Nor can I expect
to make a difference -- unless it is for ill.
But my attitude toward teachings like the above has changed.
We should await these things and be eager to be found innocent etc because our
purity – such as it is – with that of our Savior and his dear Mother Mary
and all the saints does make a real difference.
I consider the patience of our Lord as salvation. If God continues
to give us time, if the end has not yet come, we can still strive to work out
our salvation. Unlike Noah ’s generation, which
ran out of time, we have reason to hope.
True, things are dire. Americans own more guns than ever
before and are prepared to use them. The American military is more dangerous
than any force in history and some Americans don’t like the way many unarmed nations are marching toward prosperity and leaving us behind. That’s not good! One
fifth of American children are growing up in poverty, without the promises of a
better education that their ancestors enjoyed. Very grim! The United States
Supreme Court has opened the gates to abortion on demand; national, state and
regional elections bought, sold and managed by big corporations – heretofore known
as “persons.” Their decisions seem irreversible. Meanwhile, environmental contamination of air, water and soil continues
unabated regardless of the pietists who say their next energy-consuming
vehicle will be green. Etc. etc.
But -- if the Lord gives us more time the Earth will continue to
get fouler and less habitable until we decide to change our ways. Whether it’s
this generation or the next or the one after that, at some point we’ll have to
get with the program. If the earth could absorb a major shock from outer space
that ended sixty million years of dinosaur rule, and still breed innumerable
and astonishingly exotic forms of life -- it can recover from human stupidity
when we decide to stop being stupid.
And in the meanwhile, individual Christians can make a
difference by living as best as they know how. Simplicity, honesty,
integrity and faith in God will not go unheeded or unrewarded by our Good God.
Blessed John Duns Scotus taught that, whereas evil acts
leave a dreadful scar on human lives for generations, a holy act is blessed by God
and prevails for a thousand generations. That’s because God has infinite
authority to bless good acts, and evil acts have severely limited authority:
For I, the LORD, your God, am a jealous
God, inflicting punishment for their ancestors’ wickedness on the children of
those who hate me, down to the third and fourth generation; but showing love
down to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.
I suppose most parents at some point must tell their
children, “We did the best we knew how by the lights that we had.” I know my
parents did. They might have done better with better education, more wealth,
better counselors, etc. No social workers ever worked in my neighborhood to
negotiate conflicts between the generations. The religious workers – priests and
nuns – had little insight and less availability to help with our problems.
But I know my parents did the best they could and left the
rest to God’s superabundant mercy. And we turned out okay. Not great, but okay,
and perhaps a bit better than okay.
Despite the deep-in-my-heart pretensions of the Boom Generation we're not going to overcome someday.
But neither will God forget
those who await these things, and (are) eager to be found without spot or blemish before him,
at peace; and consider the patience of our Lord as salvation.
Aw gee, I thought I was supposed to save the world. No, wait, Jesus is the Savior of the world. It is hard to keep that in mind. I am only His humble servant.
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