Saturday, February 22, 2025

Homily for the Sunday of the Last Judgment (Meat Fare) in the Orthodox Church

 


1 Corinthians 8:8-9:2; Matthew 25:31-46

             In case you have somehow not noticed, Great Lent begins a week from tomorrow.  On this Sunday of the Last Judgment, the Church reminds us that the point of the upcoming season of repentance is not the keeping of religious rules or the performance of any form of piety as an end in itself.  Our vocation in Lent is, instead, to open our souls to the healing mercy of the Lord so that we may enter more fully into His victory over sin and death at Pascha.  The ultimate test of whether we will do so this Lent is not simply a matter of how strictly we fast, how many services we attend, or how much money we give to the poor.  It is, instead, whether we will unite ourselves to Christ such that His love permeates every dimension of our character to the point that we treat our neighbors as He treats us.  At a deep level, that is what repentance is all about. As today’s gospel lesson reveals, every encounter with those who bear God’s image is an encounter with Christ that anticipates our ultimate judgment, which will reveal whether we have become living icons of His healing and restoration of the human person.  

            As we begin the last week before Great Lent, the Savior teaches us that how we relate to our neighbors, especially those we are inclined to overlook, disregard, and even despise due to their weakness and suffering, is the great test of our souls.    How we treat the hungry and thirsty, the stranger and the naked, the sick and the prisoner, manifests whether we are gaining the spiritual health to love as Christ has loved us.  How we relate to our suffering and inconvenient neighbors, whoever they are, is how we relate to our Lord.  We must not rest content with a culturally accommodated faith that congratulates us for being concerned almost exclusively with the wellbeing of our family, friends, and others with whom we identify for some reason.  We are Gentile Christians, strangers and foreigners to the heritage of Israel who have now been grafted in by grace and become heirs to the fulfillment of the promises to Abraham through faith in the Savior.  We will condemn only ourselves if we refuse to share the undeserved lovingkindness that we have received with the strangers and foreigners of our day, including those we may be tempted to view as our enemies.  We will repudiate the love of our Lord and show that we want no part in His salvation if we persist in finding excuses to justify our neglect of anyone who experiences the bodily sufferings of those with whom Christ identified Himself as “the least of these.”   

            Whether in Lent or any other time of the year, we must reject the temptation of trying to impress God by doing good deeds of any kind.  Instead of serving our pride by obsessively trying to justify ourselves through religious legalism, our calling is humbly to take the small and imperfect steps that we currently have the strength to take in conveying His selfless love to other people.  The point is not to measure ourselves according to an impersonal standard of perfection, but to grow in conforming our character to His as we serve those who need our help.  Doing so is an essential dimension of being able to say truthfully, “I no longer live, but Christ lives in me.” (Gal. 2:20)

            On this last day for consuming meat until Pascha, we must also resist the temptation to obsess about whether we will be able to follow all the Church’s canons about fasting in Lent.  Such canons are guidelines that we embrace for the healing of our souls with the guidance of a spiritual father.  They are not objective impersonal laws from a book that everyone must obey in the same way.  Today we read St. Paul’s teaching that the key issue in the question of whether to eat meat that had been sacrificed in pagan temples in first-century Corinth was how doing so impacted others, for “food will not commend us to God. We are no worse off if we do not eat, and no better off if we do. Only take care, lest this liberty of yours somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.”  To cause another to fall back into paganism would be to “sin against Christ.”  His words show that what is truly at stake in fasting is not a mere change in diet or the fulfillment of a law for its own sake, but learning to relate to food in ways that help us acquire the spiritual strength to love and serve our neighbors.  By abstaining from the richest and most satisfying dishes to the best of our ability, we gain strength to reorient our desires from self-gratification toward blessing others.  Eating a humble diet frees up resources to give to the needy in whom we encounter Christ.  Lenten foods should be simple and keep well for future meals, thus freeing up time and energy for prayer, spiritual reading, and serving our neighbors.  Even the smallest steps in fasting can help us gain a measure of freedom from slavery to our passions as we learn that we really can live without satisfying every desire for pleasure.   Especially if we are new to this practice, it is important to begin with the very small steps that we can actually take in a spiritually healthy way. Trying to do more than we really can do at this point in our journey is invariably counterproductive and discouraging.  As people with responsibilities in our families, at work, at school, and in relation to our needy neighbors, we must not deprive ourselves of nourishment to the point that we lack the energy necessary to act as good stewards of our talents every day.   

The spiritual discipline of fasting is simply a tool for shifting the focus away from ourselves and toward the Lord and our brothers and sisters in whom we encounter Him each day.  If we distort fasting into a private religious accomplishment to prove how holy we are to ourselves or anyone else, we would do better not to fast at all.  That is the vain effort of trying to serve ourselves instead of God and those who bear His image and likeness.  In Lent, our focus must be set squarely on Christ and His living icons, not on us.  The fundamental calling of the Christian life is to become like our Lord, Who offered Himself up for the salvation of the world purely out of love.  If we are truly in communion with Him, then we too must offer up ourselves for our neighbors. And as He taught in the parable of the Good Samaritan, there are no limits on what it means to be a neighbor to anyone who is in need, regardless of nationality, religion, or anything else.  

The particular form of our self-offering will vary according to the needs of the people we encounter and our gifts, callings, and life circumstances.  Discerning how to live faithfully is not a matter of cold-blooded rational calculation or meeting objective standards, but of being so conformed to Christ that we become a “living sacrifice” (Rom. 12:1) such that the Savior’s healing of fallen humanity becomes present, active, and effective in us.  Instead of defining ourselves over against one another in an endless cycle of competition and grievance in a pathetic effort to distract ourselves from the inevitability of the grave, we must grow as persons in communion with Christ and all those who bear His image and likeness.  His eternal life will truly become ours as we unite ourselves more fully to His great Self-Offering on the Cross for the salvation of the world.  The more we acquire the character of those liberated from slavery to the fear of death, the greater our freedom will be from the passions that blind us from seeing and serving Christ in every neighbor.

            Whenever we encounter the Lord in a suffering person who needs our care, there is inevitably a kind of judgment that reveals who we truly are. That is the case when we see His living icons suffering today as the victims of natural disasters, wars, and other catastrophes around the world. It is the case when those who bear His image are sick, lonely, hungry, imprisoned, or in any other circumstance in which they need our friendship, care, and support.  Since we are not yet those who respond generously to everyone without a second thought, we must mindfully struggle against our self-centeredness and indifference to the sufferings of others.  In order to do that, we must not shut the eyes of our souls to the brilliant light of Christ when the darkness within us becomes all the more apparent.  We must respond to what every judgment of our souls reveals by taking the steps we can to open and offer our hearts to Christ more fully so that we will become more beautiful living icons of His restoration and fulfillment of the human person in the divine image and likeness.  In order to do that, we must persistently refuse to fuel our passions with self-indulgence as we fast as best we can and humble ourselves while calling out for the Lord’s healing mercy from the depths of our hearts.

            Be prepared this Lent.  Fasting is a wonderful teacher of humility, for it is such a hard struggle for most of us to disappoint our stomachs and tastebuds even in very small ways. Serving our suffering neighbors is also a wonderful teacher of humility, for most of us are experts in coming up with excuses for disregarding them.  When these disciplines reveal our weakness, we must not despair, but instead call on the mercy of the Lord from the depths of our hearts and then take the next small steps that we have the strength to take on the blessed path to the Kingdom.   If we will do so throughout the remaining time of our life and persist in returning to the path whenever we stray from it, then we will have good hope of being among those quite surprised to hear at the Last Judgment, “’Come, O blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.’”  Like the people on His right hand in the parable, that will not be because we have calculated rationally how to earn a prize or met some objective legal standard.  Instead, it will be because the self-emptying love and gracious mercy of Christ have permeated our souls and become constitutive of our character.  Every day of Lent, and every day of our lives, let us live accordingly, for “‘Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me.’”  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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