In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
Often people are struck by the question: how can a man be saved? And we find in
this passage of the Gospel, as in a whole number of others, such a simple,
precise answer to it. Your salvation is in your own hands: forgive — and you
will be forgiven. And the moment you are forgiven, it means that eternal life is
open to you.
In today's Gospel Christ tells us about a man who owed a vast sum of money to
his overlord but had no means of repaying and his lord forgave him all because
he had pity on him. After leaving his overlord's presence this man met another
who owed him a small amount, and began demanding payment without mercy. Hearing
this the overlord said: I forgave you your enormous debt, so how could you not
forgive your debtor his small indebtedness? In the same way we expect that
through one word of God's mercy, the gates of eternal life will be opened for
us, yet we close these very doors — no, the small doors of this temporal life in
the face of another person. What can we hope for?
The Gospel says in another place: with what measure you measure it shall be
measured unto you. In the Beatitudes it says: blessed are the merciful for they
shall obtain mercy, and in the Lord's prayer: forgive us as we forgive. How
simple it all seems, and yet how difficult we find it. It would be simple if our
hearts responded to sorrow, to need; it is difficult because our hearts are
silent. But why is this so? May it not be because when someone behaves badly we
always think he must be a bad man, without realising that often the man so much
wants to be good, so much wants every word of his to be pure, his thoughts and
his heart pure, his actions worthy ones, but he simply has not the strength, he
is enmeshed by old habits, by the pressures of his environment, by false shame
and so many other things. And he continues to act wrongly; but we could
disentangle him. We could look at him as God looks at him, with pity, as one
might look at a sick man dying of a disease that could be cured if only he were
given the right treatment.
And each one of us could do what is necessary for someone. Look at a man and
pity him for being wicked, angry, vengeful, bad in one way or another. Have pity
on him and turn the bright side of your soul towards him, tell him that his
actions and his words will not deceive you, however wicked they may be, because
you know that he is an image, an icon of God, besmirched and disfigured, and yet
in him you bow down to God, and love him as a brother. To do this may cost you a
great deal, but if you can do it once or twice and see how a person changes
because you have faith in him, because you have rested God's hope on him, what a
world we should live in — a world of mutual trust. True, we should have to pay
for it with our heart's blood, with tears of compassion, with agony of soul, but
what joy there would be not only among the angels of God in heaven when they saw
a sinner saved, but in our own hearts when we suddenly saw that in response to
our compassion and love, a person was filled with the light of eternal life!
Amen.