Homily for June 16th, 2015: 2 Corinthians 6:1-10.
“We beg you
not to receive the grace of God in vain,” we heard in our first reading.
“Grace” is the biblical word for God’s love, which includes the help we need to
follow him. Grace is not something we can earn. It is a free gift. To be
useful, however, we must accept and use what God gives us, out of sheer
generosity. Refusing to do so is what Paul calls “receiving the grace of God in
vain.”
How
do we do this? Most often, probably, through procrastination. ‘I’ll get to that
tomorrow,’ we think. ‘Right now I’m more concerned with . . .’ my own affairs,
plans, whatever. In Jesus’ parable of the rich man and poor Lazarus, who lies
unnoticed at the rich man’s gate, the rich man, after his death, asks Abraham to send
someone to his still living brothers, lest they too experience the torment the
rich man is undergoing. Abraham’s response to this seemingly reasonable request
sounds callous: “Let them read Moses and the prophets.” That was Jesus’ way of
telling his hearers, ourselves included, that present circumstances are always
enough for us to believe in God and serve him.
Most of us, most of the time,
live and work in circumstances that are less than ideal. Confronted with our
modest achievements, we plead that they are a consequence of our limited
opportunities. When things change and we get into better circumstances, we shall be able to accomplish so much more.
That is an illusion.
The golden opportunities that beckon
on the other side of the horizon will never arrive if we are not using the
opportunities, however limited, that are before us right now. It is here and
now, in the present moment (the only time we ever have) that we are called to
faith in God, and to generous service of God and others — and not somewhere
else, tomorrow, when everything changes at the touch of some magic wand and our
lives cease to be drab and become wonderful.
That is what Paul is telling us with
his simple but powerful words: “Now is the acceptable time! Now is the day of salvation!”
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