In this weekend’s readings at Mass, one
major theme runs through all three Scripture passages: God’s incredible love
for His people.
In the first reading, from Second
Chronicles, we learn that God sent messengers and prophets “early and often” to
the nation of Judah, “for He had compassion on His people.” Although they were
the recipients of God’s love and care, the people often ignored the Lord and
went their own way, which led to lots of trouble. (Hmm, that sounds a lot like
us nowadays!)
In this week’s second reading, St. Paul
taught that salvation is a free, undeserved gift from God. He wrote, “For by
grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not from you; it is the
gift of God; it is not from works, so no one may boast. For we are his
handiwork, created in Christ Jesus for the good works that God has prepared in advance.”
We don’t deserve to be saved, but God
offers salvation because of His love for us. We then perform good works—loving
God with all our heart and our neighbor as ourselves—as a natural outpouring of
gratitude for being offered the gift of salvation. To clarify a major
Catholic-Protestant argument over the centuries, we are not saved BY good
works, we are instead saved FOR good works.
Think of it this way: if someone gives
you a birthday present, do you accept it joyfully, or do you reach for your checkbook
and glumly ask, “OK, how much do I owe you?” How rude! And if the birthday
present is worth $100 but you only have $20 in your checking account, this
gesture is not only rude, it’s foolish. Since God’s gift of salvation is
priceless, how can we possibly pay for it? To think that we can “earn” our way
into Heaven by our own efforts is, I hate to be blunt, both rude AND foolish.
Finally, in the Gospel reading this
weekend, Jesus offers what is probably the most famous verse in the whole
Bible—John 3:16—the one-sentence summary of the entire Good News message: “For
God so loved the world that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes
in Him might not perish but might have eternal life.”
God’s love for us is overwhelming and
unlimited. Also, it’s remarkable that He loves us at all, since the history of
mankind has been a steady stream of selfishness, ingratitude, hypocrisy,
cruelty, idolatry and apostasy. If you’re not convinced, just read the morning
paper each day for the next few weeks. Frankly, I were God (and let’s all offer
a heartfelt “Thank God!” that I’m not), I would have given up on mankind a long
time ago.
But God does love us. So much so, in
fact, that He gave His one and only Son to pay the ultimate price for our
sinfulness—Jesus, the sinless lamb, nailed to the cross as an atoning
sacrifice.
The only thing we need to “do” to
receive this love of God is just that: receive it. All we have to do is accept
it, embrace it, believe it. We simply put our faith and trust and hope in God—and
that’s it. If we truly accept and embrace God’s love, His Spirit will fill our
hearts and our good works surely will follow.
Jesus said “the light came into the
world,” meaning the light of God’s truth and love and forgiveness. He then
explained that many people “hate the light,” preferring instead the evil and
wicked works of darkness. Let’s not make that mistake.
The light of God’s love is shining
brightly in the world. Embrace it—embrace HIM—and let His love and peace and
joy fill your heart.
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