Hebrews 11:33-12:2; Matthew
10:32-33, 37-38; 19:27-30
The word “saint” simply means “holy.” On this first Sunday after Pentecost, we commemorate all those who are so filled with the Holy Spirit that they shine brightly with holiness. They bear witness to the meaning of Pentecost, for it is by the power of the Holy Spirit that people fulfill their calling to become like God in holiness as they enter into the eternal communion of love shared by the Persons of the Holy Trinity. When our risen and ascended Lord sent the Holy Spirit upon His followers, He fulfilled the prophecy spoken by Jeremiah: “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, ‘Know the Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest.” (Jer. 31:33-34) The saints show us that everyone may embrace personally the transformation and healing of the Holy Spirit, for the “living water” of the Spirit flows in and through them as a sign of the salvation of the world. (Jn. 7:38) That is how they have become, as St. Paul wrote, “heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him, that we may also be glorified together.” (Rom. 8:16)
We do not know the names of all the
saints, but God certainly knows all who have entered into the blessedness of
the heavenly kingdom. As members
together with them of the same Body of Christ, we ask for their prayers as we
strive to follow their example of faithful witness to the Lord. The root meaning of the word “martyr” is
“witness,” and from the stoning of St. Stephen the Protomartyr to the present
day those who have refused to deny Christ even to the point of death have
provided powerful testimony to the Savior Who has liberated them from the fear
of the grave. Their shining example
inspires us to take up our crosses in following our Lord as we seek first the
Kingdom of God in the particular circumstances of our lives. Christ said, “Everyone who acknowledges Me before men, I
also will acknowledge before my Father Who is in heaven; but whoever denies Me
before men, I also will deny before My Father Who is in heaven.” As the varied lives of the saints across the
ages demonstrate, there are many ways of showing our faithfulness to Him, even
as there are many ways of denying Him.
That such broken
people became glorious saints is not an exception to the rule, but the
norm. If we want to find healing for our
souls, we will not do so by convincing ourselves that we have somehow already
fulfilled the Lord’s command to “be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is
perfect” (Matt. 5:48) Neither, however, we will we share in the holiness of God
by accepting the lie that anything we have said, thought, or done makes it
impossible for us to be transformed by the Lord’s healing mercy. Photini, the Samaritan woman at the well, and
Zacchaeus, the corrupt tax-collector, were lost causes according to the
conventional religious and moral standards of first-century Palestine, but they
received Christ in ways that transformed them into glorious saints.
They remind us that everyone who shares in the
blessed life of the Savior does so through their participation in His grace, not
as a reward for good behavior. Our
reading from Hebrews teaches that the righteous of the Old Testament, “though
well attested by their faith, did not receive what was promised, since God had
foreseen something better for us, that apart from us they should not be made
perfect.” It is impossible to become
like God in holiness apart from sharing in Jesus Christ’s healing and
fulfillment of the human person. He
enables both those who may appear to have never done anything wrong and those
who may appear never to have done anything right to become His saints, if they
will embrace the struggle to entrust themselves so fully to Him that they
become living icons of His salvation.
That is the only way that anyone becomes a “partaker of the divine
nature” by grace.
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