Galatians 2:16-20
Luke 16:19-31
During
our mission trip to Guatemala in July, we met children from very poor and
broken families that could not care for them.
The kids who live at the Orthodox orphanage are surely among the most
fortunate needy children in that part of the world, for they have food,
clothing, shelter, education, and the love provided by the nuns and staff. Too often children in such circumstances are
simply abandoned and left to face whatever cruel fate awaits them due to
disease, starvation, or abuse. They are
truly “the least of these.” Their names are not known and their lives and
deaths are not thought to be very important in the eyes of the world.
How completely shocking it is, then,
that our gospel text gives us the name of the desperately poor and miserable Lazarus,
but leaves out the name of the rich man.
This detail shows us that God’s kingdom is not like worldly kingdoms,
not like human society as we know it.
For the kind of wealth that makes people famous in this life counts for
nothing in the next. And the kind of
humility, the kind of complete trust in God that the poorest of the poor are in
the best position to have, counts for little in today’s world; yet, it is only
by that kind of humble trust that anyone will enter the kingdom of God.
No, the point is not that all the
rich will be damned and all the poor will be saved. Instead, it is that there are strong and deep
temptations associated with focusing on wealth, possessions, and success in
this world. For if we love ourselves, our riches, and our status more than God
and neighbor, no matter how much or little we have, we will shut ourselves out of
the kingdom. The name Lazarus means “One
who has been helped,” and those whose miserable life circumstances do not
encourage them to trust in money, power, or success are
in a good position to learn that their help is in the Lord, in His mercy and
love.
The rich man never learned that
lesson, however. He wore only
outrageously expensive clothes and had a great feast every day. He must have known about the poor beggar
Lazarus. He probably stepped over or
around him every time he went in or out of his house. Here was a dying man, lying on the ground,
whose only comfort was the stray dogs who would lick his open sores. All that Lazarus wanted were the crumbs that
fell from the man’s table, you might say his garbage. But the rich man was so
greedy and thoughtless that he apparently denied him even that. Our Lord is quite clear about the
consequences of such a life. This man
showed no mercy; he demonstrated no love for his wretched neighbor.
Consequently, he cut himself off from the mercy and love of God.
His eternal suffering shows the
reality of what it means to refuse to respond to our calling to live as those
created in God’s image and likeness.
This man would not be like Christ in any way. He showed what he thought of the Lord by
treating his neighbor, surely one of “the least of these” who also bore the
divine image and likeness, literally like trash. And when he called for mercy from Father
Abraham, he made no confession and did no repentance. He cared only for himself and his brothers,
and obviously had no concern for obeying Moses and prophets who had made clear
the obligation of the Jews to care for the poor.
As we say in the prayers of the Church, we will all need
mercy before the judgment seat of Christ.
We err, however, if we think of the Lord’s mercy as being available only
in some arbitrary way at some point in eternity. For we encounter Him every day in our
neighbors, especially the poor, wretched, and inconvenient: the widow, the orphan, and the stranger. We participate in His mercy by showing mercy
to them. The rich man in the parable
shaped himself decisively in unholy ways by his behavior; in contrast, we may
shape ourselves decisively in holy ways by our behavior. We never earn God’s mercy, but we will
ultimately make offerings of our lives to God or to something else. We will either worship and serve Him or
ourselves. Perhaps the Lord’s eternal
judgment will be more a confirmation of who we have become than a shocking
decree from out of the blue.
God knows our hearts and we can hide nothing from Him,
either today or at any point in the future.
Our faith as Orthodox Christians goes to the heart, to the depths of who
we are, but also reminds us that we are always in relationship with other
people who are also the children of God.
We encounter Him in them. Who we
are in relation to Jesus Christ is shown each day of our lives in how we treat
others, especially those who need our help, attention, and friendship, as well
as our enemies. A Christianity that
ignores “the least of these” is not worthy of the name. Every human being is created in the image and
likeness of God. We bring judgment upon
ourselves whenever we treat our neighbors, no matter who they are or how they
have offended us, in ways that do not manifest the divine love and compassion.
Contrary to popular opinion, the
Christian life is not about feeling, emotion, or sentiment. No, it is a commitment, a sacrifice, an
offering of ourselves to God. As St. Paul wrote, “I have been crucified with
Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ Who lives in me; and the life I
now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, Who loved me and gave
Himself for me.” Surely, those who live
that way will bear witness to the mercy of Christ by showing that same mercy to
other people.
The Nativity or Advent fast starts
on November 15 as we prepare to welcome Christ at His Nativity on December 25. During those forty days, we should plan on
giving the money that we save by eating a humble diet to those who do not have
the basic necessities of life, as we have done as a parish for Syrian refugees
and needy people in our own community. Think also of the crumbs from our tables,
the small bits of time and energy, that we are all able to give: to the sick and lonely who need visitors or
at least a note or a phone call; to children who need tutors and mentors; to
pregnant women in difficult situations who need our support to help them
welcome their babies; and to the countless other people in our own
neighborhoods who need God’s blessing in their lives in tangible, practical ways.
The hard truth is that, if we are
not sharing our lives and blessings with others in some way, we will become
just like the rich man who was too caught up with his own pleasure to worry
about poor Lazarus. We know where that
path leads. The good news is that Christ
has shown us a better way which is open to us in every generation, in every
walk of life, no matter how rich or poor we are. For the money and power of the world will
fade away; they do not last. Only one
thing lasts, and that is the selfless love of our Lord, God, and Savior Jesus
Christ Who has conquered sin and death.
And we all have gifts and abilities that may become channels of His
blessing and mercy to a world of people like Lazarus, whether their wounds are
physical or spiritual or emotional.
We do not have to save the world;
Christ has already done that. We just
have to be faithful: to trust, believe,
and follow our Savior in how we treat others.
He turned no one away empty-handed and neither should we. If we claim His mercy and love for ourselves,
we must do likewise for all who bear His image and likeness. We must be Christians not merely in name, but
also in how we live, even when it is inconvenient. Then we will become living icons of the
salvation that Jesus Christ has brought to a world of sin and death, and the
Lazaruses of the world will know that they too are the children of God. And together with them, we will all share in
the mercy of a Lord Who raises the dead, heals the sick, feeds the hungry, and
makes even the most miserable people guests at His heavenly banquet.
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