Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
We remember today the Myrrh-bearing women, Joseph of Arimathea and
Nicodemus, people who in the course of the Gospel are hardly
mentioned, yet who, when Christ was seemingly defeated, when death,
rejection, betrayal and hatred had conquered, proved to be people of
faithfulness and courage, the faithfulness of the heart and the
courage that can be born only of love. At the moment of the
Crucifixion all the Apostles had fled save one, John, who stood at
the foot of the Cross with the Mother of God. Everyone else had
abandoned Christ, only a small group of women stood at a short
distance from the Cross, and when He had died, they came to anoint
His Body which Joseph of Arimathea had sought from Pilate, unafraid
of being recognised as a disciple, because in life and in death love
and faithfulness had conquered.
Let us reflect on this. It is easy to be Christ's disciples when we
are on the crest of the wave, in the security of countries where no
persecution, no rejection is endured, no betrayal can lead us to
martyrdom, or simply to becoming the victims of mockery and
rejection.
Let us think of ourselves not in regard to Christ alone but with
regard to one another, because Christ has said that what we have
done to any one of us, to the smallest, to the most insignificant,
we have done to Him.
Let us ask ourselves how we behave when someone is rejected, mocked,
ostracised, condemned by public opinion or by the opinion of those
who mean something to us, whether at that moment our heart remains
faithful, whether at that moment we find courage to say, ‘He was,
and he remains my friend whether you accept or reject him’. There is
no greater measure of faithfulness than that faithfulness which is
made manifest in defeat. Let us consider this, because we all are
defeated, we are defeated in so many ways. We all strive, with
whatever energy we have - a little or much, to be what we should be,
and we are defeated at every moment. Should we not look at one
another not only with compassion, but with the faithfulness of
friends who are prepared to stand by a person who falls, falls away
from grace, falls away from his own ideal, frustrates all hopes and
expectations which we have set on him or her. At that time let us
stand by, at that time let us be faithful and prove that our love
was not conditioned by the hope of victory but was a wholehearted
gift, gratuitous, joyful, wonderful. Amen. |