|
November 20, 2005
The Good News
...Repentance
The constant call of the Church is a
call to repentance. This is so because Jesus began His public
ministry with that call: “Repent of your sins. Change your
way of life and follow Me.” Moreover, throughout His ministry,
He continued to issue this invitation, this challenge, this
call to conversion.
Just recently, I came across a homily
that was written in the Second Century. Its topic was repentance
and it is as relevant today as then because it presents
the teaching of Jesus and our holy Catholic Church.
I believe you will be as inspired as
I was by this portion of the homily I wish to share with
you.
Sincere repentance
We should repent of our sins while we
are still on earth. When a potter is making a vessel and
it becomes misshapen or breaks in his hands, he shapes it
again; but once placed in the oven, it is beyond repair.
Now the clay in the craftsman’s hands is an image of ourselves,
and it teaches us that, while still in this world, we must
wholeheartedly repent of sins committed in the body and
make it possible for the Lord to save us while there is
time. When we have left this world, we shall no longer be
able to repent and confess our sins. We must do the will
of the Father, keep our bodies pure, and observe the commandments
of the Lord, for this is the way to obtain eternal life.
The Lord says in the gospel: If you have not been
observant in small matters, who will entrust you with anything
important? For I tell you that the man who is faithful in
the smallest things is faithful in the greatest things as
well. In other words, in order to obtain eternal life, we
must remain pure and keep the seal of our baptism undefiled.
Nor must any of you say that our bodies
will not share in the judgment, nor rise again. In what
were you saved? In what did you receive your sight? Think
for a moment. Was it not in this very body? Our bodies are
the temple of God, and as such we must guard them, for even
as we were called in the body, so shall we also be judged
in the body. Since Christ, our Lord and Savior who in the
beginning was spirit, became flesh and in this way called
us, it is in this flesh of ours that we shall also
receive our reward.
Therefore, let us love one another, so
that we may all attain to the kingdom of God. While we can
still be healed, let us surrender ourselves into the hands
of our divine physician and give him his recompense-the
recompense of true sorrow for our sins. Since he who knows
all things sees what is in our hearts, let us praise him
with our hearts as well as our lips. He will then receive
us as his children. The Lord himself has said- Those who
do my Father’s will are my brothers and sisters. Amen
|