And so, History is the day of man, but man is called to
be guided by the wisdom, by the love of God. It is because we are so
often seeking for our own ways, it is because we do not ask ourselves
what is God's way in one situation or the other that the world has
become so ugly, and so frightening, and so tragic. There is a Hebrew
poem that describes the misery of this world into which man does not
bring the love of God; it says, ‘Man has ceased to believe in God and
love has departed this world. Men have hanged themselves in forests,
have drowned themselves in lakes, in rivers. Heaven is no longer
mirrored in the lakes, in the woods; the bird does no longer sing songs
of paradise, and the Prophet himself on his pedestal has become a mere
statue.’
Is this not what we have become? Not statues, but so
much alike the wife of Lot who turned back and who became a statue of
salt. We have remained salt, and yet, we are petrified, immobile, we do
not fulfil on earth this function of ours. And Christ shows us, by
working His miracles, His acts of love and of compassion on Sabbath day,
time and again, He Who is the only true Man, the only Man who is in
total, ultimate oneness with God, what our part should be: take on the
history of mankind, take every situation in which we or others find
themselves, and carry them on our shoulders, in an act of mercy and of
love. A Western writer has said that a Christian is one to whom God has
committed the care of His world and of other people. Are we discharging
this basic central commission of ours, do we care? We may care with
tenderness, we may care sternly, but we must care. And then, this
seventh day when God in His mercy and love has committed this world to
our care, still can yet become the day of the Lord. And the City of man
which is been built without God, which so often is like the Tower of
Ваbel, may still unfold and attain the greatness and the holiness of the
City of God in which the Lord Jesus Christ, true God but also true Man,
is called to be a citizen, the heart of it, but also one of us.
Is not this call great enough? Is not God's faith in us
sufficiently inspiring? Are we going to defeat His hope, to reject His
love for ourselves or for others? Or are we going to learn from the ways
in which Christ fulfils His human vocation in the day of the Lord? Shall
we not learn from Him, and together with Him build the world which God
has dreamed, has willed and is still loving in His distress and so often
in our betrayal of Him!
Let us learn to love one another actively, bear one
another's burdens, listen to the Living God when He speaks, listen with
all our energy, look into His ways and be those who fulfil His will and
bring the world to the perfect beauty He has willed for it! Amen.