2 Corinthians 4:6-15: Luke 7:11-16
Today’s reading from the gospel
according to St. Luke comes right before that passage. The widow of Nain was having the worst day of
her life and had no reason to hope for a blessed or even tolerable future, for
in that time and place a widow who had lost her only son was in a very
precarious state. Poverty, neglect, and
abuse would threaten her daily; she would have been vulnerable and alone.
When contrary to all expectations the Lord raised her son, He transformed her
deep mourning into great joy. He restored life itself both to the young man and
to his mother.
The Lord’s great
act of compassion for this woman manifests our salvation and provides a sign of
hope in even the darkest moments of our lives in our fallen world. We weep and mourn not only for loved ones
whom we see no more, but also for the brokenness and disintegration that we
know all too well in our own souls, the lives of our loved ones, and the world
around us. Death, destruction, and
decay in all their forms are the consequences of our personal and collective refusal
to fulfill our vocation to live as those created in the image of God by
becoming like Him in holiness. We weep
with the widow of Nain not only for losing loved ones, but also for losing what
it means to be a human person as a living icon of God in a world that seems so
far from manifesting the fullness of the heavenly reign.
The good news of the Gospel is that the compassion of the Lord extends even to
those who endure the most tragic and miserable circumstances and the most profound
sorrows. Purely out of love for His
suffering children, the Father sent the Son to heal and liberate us from slavery
to the fear of death through His Cross and glorious resurrection. The Savior
touched the funeral bier and the dead man arose. Christ’s compassion for
us is so profound that He not only touched death, but entered fully into it,
into a tomb, and into Hades, because He refused to leave us to
self-destruction. He went into the
abyss and experienced the terror of the black night of the pit. The Theotokos wept bitterly at His public
torture and execution, not unlike mothers today who weep at the loss of their
children. When He rose victorious over
death in all its forms, He provided the only true basis of hope that the despair
of the grave will not have the last word on the living icons of God. His Mother and the other Myrrh-Bearing Women
were the very first to receive this unbelievably good news.
The widow of Nain wept bitterly out
of grief for the loss of her son. Christ
wept at the tomb of his friend St. Lazarus, not only for him, but for us all
who are wedded to death as the children of Adam and Eve, who were cast out of
Paradise into this world of corruption. We
weep with broken hearts out of love for those whose suffering is beyond our
ability to ease, those who are no longer with us in this life, and those from
whom we have become otherwise estranged due to their and our sins. We must learn to weep for ourselves as those
who have caught a glimpse of the eternal blessedness for which we came into
being and who know how far we are from entering fully into the joy of the Lord.
The corruption that separates us from
God and from one another takes many forms and the same is true of our healing
and restoration. The particular paths that
we must follow in order to embrace Christ’s victory over death as distinctive
persons will certainly vary. But they must
all be routes for gaining the spiritual clarity to learn to mourn our sins and
take the steps that are best for our healing and restoration as whole persons in
the world as we know it. If we refuse to
take those steps and simply wait passively to ascend someday into heavenly
peace, we will only weaken ourselves even further as we refuse to do what is
necessary to lift up our hearts to receive the Lord’s healing. There is no way around the truth that we must
do the hard work of taking up our crosses and following Him, if we want to
share in His blessed life.
In today’s epistle reading, St. Paul
reminds the Corinthians that “the light of the knowledge of the glory of God”
shining in our hearts through Christ does not guarantee a life of ease and
comfort, for “we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the exceeding
greatness of power is from God, and not from us.” God created us from the dust of the earth, to
which we will all return. We are not
only mortal, but also subject to all kinds of weaknesses, maladies, and
imperfections in every dimension of our existence as embodied persons. As the Apostle describes his ministry, “We
are pressed on every way, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but not driven
to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; smitten down, but not destroyed;
always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of
Jesus may also be manifested in our body.”
Those tempted to spiritual escapism
forget that Jesus Christ came in the flesh with a body just like ours. His humanity is whole and complete while
being united with His true divinity: He
is one Person with two natures. We unite
ourselves to His great Self-Offering on the Cross when we take up our cross of struggling
to be faithful in the midst of our weaknesses, infirmities, and corruptions, those
of everyone we encounter, and those of our culture and world. Christ does not call us somehow to escape
from this difficult path, but to pursue it as He did. As St. Paul stated, “For we who live are
always delivered to death for Jesus’ sake, that the life of Jesus may also be
manifested in our mortal flesh.” We must
die to the ongoing power of sin in our lives so that we may rise up with Christ
in holiness, gaining the spiritual strength to manifest His loving kindness and
merciful blessing to those as miserable as the widow of Nain. In order for our lives to become signs of the
presence of His Kingdom in our world of corruption, we must take up our crosses
to the point that we may say with integrity: “I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live,
but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.” (Gal. 2:20)
The Lord said, “Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be
comforted.” (Matt. 5:4) His mercy on the
widow of Nain provides us all a sign of the hope for eternal life that is ours
in Him. In order to enter into the
blessedness for which we hope, we must mourn our sins by embracing the
difficult struggle to repent of them. That
is the only way that we may gain the spiritual strength to play our unique roles
in conveying His comfort and blessing to those who suffer to the point of
despair in our world of corruption. The
more that we unite ourselves to Christ in faith and faithfulness as we take up
our crosses, the more that we will know the joy of His Kingdom even now and
become instruments for bearing witness to His salvation, which is already
breaking into the world as a “treasure in earthen vessels, that the exceeding
greatness of power is from God, and not from us.”
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