In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
More than once does the Gospel give us a warning on the way in which we shall be
judged and on the way in which we can save ourselves from condemnation. There is
a passage of the Gospel in which the Lord says: It is not everyone who will have
called Me 'Lord, Lord' who will enter the Kingdom of Heaven. There will be such
who will come to Me and say, Have we not broken bread in the precincts of Thy
Temple? Have we not prayed, have we not sung Thy glory? And I shall say to them:
Go away from me doers of iniquity.
So, it is not by outward signs of piety that we shall find salvation. The Gospel
which we read on the Day of the Publican and the Pharisee already tells us
something about this. The pharisee had been faithful in everything outwardly,
but inwardly he had remained cold and dead to the only thing that matters -
loving. He might have said to the Lord: But have I not prayed so often in Thy
Temple? He would have heard the words which I quoted a moment ago, and he might
have remembered also a passage from the Old Testament that says that the prayer
of one who does not forgive his brother is abomination before the face of the
Lord.
And so we are confronted to-day with the Gospel of the Last Judgement. A day
will come, and it may not be after we die, it may be at a moment when we are
suddenly illumined, when light comes into our mind, that we will ask ourselves:
Where is salvation? Can I hope for anything at all? We have had the first answer
to this question in the person of the publican. He could pride himself on
nothing, nothing at all. He was a traitor to his nation, he was greedy, he was
unworthy of his people, of the Testament that was the rule of the nation. And
yet, he realized that he was totally, utterly, hopelessly unworthy, and he
stood, not daring even to enter the Temple, because the Temple was the place
where the Lord lives, a place as holy as God's presence makes it; and he beat
his breast saying: Forgive me; I am a sinner. That is a first step towards
forgiveness, towards a healing of our life and soul.
To-day we are confronted with something else. It is not strict adherence to
forms of life; it is not piety, the kind of piety which one can put in inverted
commas; it is not praying if we pray unworthily, that saves us. The Lord at the
Last Judgement, as it appears clearly from this passage of the Gospel, will ask
us nothing about the tenets of our faith, or about the way in which we have
tried outwardly to please Him. He will ask us: Have you been human, or inhuman?
When you saw someone who was hungry, did your heart turn to him in compassion
and did you give him food? When you saw someone homeless, did you think of a way
of providing a roof and a little warmth and safety for him? When we were told
that someone, perhaps someone we knew, had disgraced himself and been put into
prison, did we overcome the shame of being his or her friend, and go to visit
him? When we saw someone to whom we could give the surplus of what we have, the
unnecessary coat, the unnecessary object which we possessed - did we turn and do
that? That is all the Lord is asking concerning the Last Judgement.
As I said before, His only question is: have you been human in the simplest way
in which any pagan can be human? Anyone can be human who has a heart that can
respond. If you have, then the doors are open for you to enter into the Kingdom
and to become by communion with God, not sacramental communion, but a deeper
communion even than the Sacrament, become one with Him and grow into being the
Temple of the Spirit, the Body of Christ, a place of His incarnate presence.
But if we have been inhuman, how can we think of being divine? How can we think
of being partakers of the Divine Nature, of being like Christ, possessed of the
Holy Spirit, alive for eternity? None of these can be true. And today, we are
confronted with the Judgement, with this clarity, this sharpness and His mercy.
Because God is merciful; He warns us in time. It takes one moment to change
one's life. It is one moment that is needed, not years, so that the oldest of us
can in one moment see the ugliness, the horror, the emptiness, the evil of our
lives, and turn to God with a cry, crying for mercy. And the youngest can learn
now that it is time, step by step, to be simply human. If we are human, then we
become the friends of God, because to be a Christian means to choose Christ for
one's friend. And you know what friendship means; it means solidarity, it means
loyalty, it means faithfulness, it means being at one in soul, in heart, in
action with the one who is our friend. This is the choice we all have made,
seemingly, and forgotten so often.
So to-day we are confronted with this Gospel of the Judgement. But we can do
something now to face it. After the Service, at the doors, there will be a
collection for "Crisis". "Crisis" is an organization which looks after those who
are homeless and have to live on the streets, who depend on the passer-by to
have a chance to eat, who depend on the mercy of people. Well, face today's
reading of the Gospel. Face it not only emotionally but in fact, and when you
are confronted with a plate at the doors of the Church, give, give generously,
give with your whole heart, give as you would wish to be given if you were in
the street, unprotected, alone, hoping beyond hope, or having lost all hope in
human charity.
We have got a few moments to do a thing which is infinitely simple. Let us do
it, and may God's blessing be upon anyone who will have done something, not just
a little, but as much as possible, to enable another person to stay alive, to
breathe, not to collapse.