1 Corinthians 8:8-9:2; Matthew
25:31-46
Today we continue to prepare to follow our Lord to His cross and empty
tomb at Pascha. Great Lent begins a
week from tomorrow, and it is time for each of us to get ready to embrace the
spiritual disciplines of the season in a way appropriate to our spiritual strength
and life circumstances. Since fasting
from rich food and giving generously to the needy are characteristic practices
of Lent, the Church directs our attention today to passages of Scripture that
place them in their proper context.
When St. Paul wrote to the confused
Gentile Christians of Corinth, he had to remind his audience of former idol
worshipers to restrain their liberty in what they ate for the sake of their
weaker brothers and sisters in Christ.
Pagan temples were a good source of cheap barbeque in Corinth, and some new
converts might be led back to paganism by the sight of a fellow believer eating
meat that had been sacrificed to a false god. St. Paul warned that scandalizing
someone in that way was a sin against the Lord and wrote that “if food
is a cause of my brother’s falling, I will never eat meat, lest I cause my
brother to fall.” Notice that the
problem was not with the food itself, but with how eating it might harm someone
else. He called the Corinthians to limit
their freedom for the sake of others.
As we
prepare to give up eating meat after today until Pascha, we must keep squarely
in mind that there is nothing intrinsically wrong with any kind of food. The problem is not with what is on the menu,
but with how we use food in ways that weaken us spiritually. Remember that, in the biblical narrative,
humanity’s estrangement from God is first manifested in relation to food. Our unruly appetite is a prime example of our
enslavement to our own desires, of our addiction to getting what we want when
and how we want it. That is a form of idolatry as dangerous as that which
threatened the faithfulness of the Corinthians. It may even be more dangerous
because it is so subtle, as few people today think of their eating habits as
being spiritually significant.
Especially in a society where food
is plentiful and relatively cheap, it is so easy to get in the habit of eating
in a self-centered, indulgent way that is not healthy spiritually or
physically. The more deeply ingrained
the habit of satisfying our taste buds and stomachs becomes, the weaker we
become in our ability to resist other self-centered, indulgent desires. That makes it harder to put the needs of
others before our own or to control what we say or do for the sake of
others. We do not fast in Lent because
some foods are unholy, but in order to learn to redirect our deepest desires to
God. Our fulfillment is in Him, not our
bellies. Since every human being bears His image and likeness, we should fast
in a way that strengthens us in our ability to serve Him in our neighbors,
especially those we are inclined to overlook and disregard. Not only is fasting a powerful tool for the
healing of self-centered desire, it will also save us some money on our grocery
bill that we can then give to the poor.
The Lord makes the connection between our spiritual health and generosity to our needy neighbors quite clear in His parable of the Last Judgement. The ultimate standard of eternal destiny here is how people treated Him in the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the stranger, the sick, and the prisoner. Neither those on His right nor on His left had any idea of the spiritual significance of their actions, but His identification with “the least of these My brethren” is so real that whatever they did, or did not do, to the miserable people they encountered throughout their lives, they did or did not do, to Him.
The Lord makes the connection between our spiritual health and generosity to our needy neighbors quite clear in His parable of the Last Judgement. The ultimate standard of eternal destiny here is how people treated Him in the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the stranger, the sick, and the prisoner. Neither those on His right nor on His left had any idea of the spiritual significance of their actions, but His identification with “the least of these My brethren” is so real that whatever they did, or did not do, to the miserable people they encountered throughout their lives, they did or did not do, to Him.
Hunger, thirst, disease, crime, and
all other forms of human misery as we know them in our world of corruption are
symptoms of our estrangement from God.
Instead of living as those made in His image and likeness, we have all
followed in the way of the first Adam in prideful, self-centered
indulgence. That is why we are inclined
to obsess about fulfilling our own desires while ignoring the basic needs of
our neighbors. The habit of stuffing
ourselves with rich food weakens our ability to put others before ourselves in
any area of life. If we want to become
those who serve Christ “in the least of these,” we must learn that our
lives—including our money, time, and energy-- do not amount to a grand offering
to ourselves. No, we must learn to refuse
to gratify many of our inclinations so that we will be able to offer ourselves in
holiness to the Lord Who is present in our suffering neighbors.
Unfortunately, we are usually so
weakened by our self-centered desires that we do not treat other people with
the dignity of living icons of the Savior.
The problem is not that we fail to work out in our minds that Christ is
present to us in a particular person, but that we lack the spiritual strength
necessary to serve them as we should. This is the same kind of weakness that we
experience before our favorite foods and beverages; before we know it, we have consumed
too much. It is the same kind of weakness that we have when we are angry and
find it virtually impossible not to lash out.
It is the same kind of weakness that makes it to so easy to choose just
about anything over prayer. The problem is not with our ideas about what
is true, but with our souls.
Lent hits us where we live and there is much
in us that does not like that. But what
path other than that of self-denial will enable us to follow Christ to the
cross and to embrace the joy of His resurrection as the fulfillment of our
existence? If we do not learn to deny
ourselves in humility as we serve our neighbors each day, then how can we truly
claim to be united with Christ, Who offered Himself for the salvation of the
world? If we are in Him, His sacrificial
love must become characteristic of us in how we live the point that we may say
with St. Paul “It is no longer I who live, but Christ Who lives in me.” (Gal.
2: 20)
Even as we fast in a way
appropriate to our spiritual maturity and life circumstances, we should think of
serving “the least of these” in the same way.
To give up because we cannot meet our imagined ideal of perfection is
simply an excuse not to pursue the healing of our souls. We can all pray for
those who suffer, provide friendship and support to someone who is lonely and
troubled, and treat neighbors with love. We can all become a blessing to
someone who needs us. We can all restrain our self-indulgence in order to grow in generosity. Instead of
doubting the significance of what we can do, we must remember that the Lord
accepts even the small offerings we are able to make in humility and blesses
them to serve His Kingdom abundantly.
Remember also that we will never
gain the strength to serve the Lord faithfully in people who are not close to us
if we have not learned how to serve Him in those who are close to us, especially
our spouses, children, and family members.
The opportunities for finding healing from self-centeredness are
unlimited in the common life of man and woman together with their children and
extended families. That is why brides
and grooms are crowned for martyrdom in the Orthodox wedding ceremony. If we are not sacrificing ourselves out of
love for those with whom we are “one flesh,” how will we ever be able to do
that for others? Regardless of marital
status, most of us do not have to look far for opportunities to serve Christ in
those we know quite well.
The same is true of our life together in the Body of Christ, for we are all “one flesh” in Him. Doing what we can to bear one another’s burdens and to provide relief of whatever kind for the problems that we face is how we serve the Lord together. For all our challenges, this little parish has embodied His love in powerful ways both for our members and complete strangers. If we serve Christ faithfully in His Body the Church even in what seem like the small ways that are available to us, we will advance in dying to our illusions of self-centered individuality and embrace more fully our true identity as members of Him and one another.
The same is true of our life together in the Body of Christ, for we are all “one flesh” in Him. Doing what we can to bear one another’s burdens and to provide relief of whatever kind for the problems that we face is how we serve the Lord together. For all our challenges, this little parish has embodied His love in powerful ways both for our members and complete strangers. If we serve Christ faithfully in His Body the Church even in what seem like the small ways that are available to us, we will advance in dying to our illusions of self-centered individuality and embrace more fully our true identity as members of Him and one another.
Let us fast this Lent in ways that
will free us from bondage to the self-centeredness that causes so much human
misery and keeps us from serving our Savior in “the least of these.” Let us serve one another in the life of this
parish and in our families in ways that prepare us to enter a Kingdom in which “the
last shall be first, and the first last.” (Mark 20:16) Let us never forget that what we do, or do
not do, to the people we are inclined to ignore, we do to the Lord
Himself. Let us repent by
gaining the spiritual strength to reorient our lives to serving Christ in all
those who bear His image and likeness. That
is how we, by God’s grace, may have good hope of entering into the Kingdom of
Heaven.
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