Homily for the 5th Sunday
in Ordinary Time, February 5th and 6th
“Through the gospel I preached you
are also being saved”
A lot of
non-Catholics ask “when were you saved?”
The correct answer is “I am in the process of being saved.” That is why Saint Paul uses that phrase here,
and why Matthew 25 shows that God’s judgment rests on the works that we do that
flow from our Faith, and not simply because at some date I decided to
accept Jesus into my heart and make Jesus my personal Lord and Savior.
Jesus even
warns “not all who call me Lord will enter the kingdom of Heaven, but only the
one who DOES the Will of My Father.”
This “potentially
being saved” is not God holding a sword over us ready to pounce – it simply is
the Truth….because of free will, I am always able to walk away from God at any
point up to the moment of death.
To believe at
any point in my life my salvation is guaranteed, is simply wrong.
There are
two opposite temptations, depending on our personality and temperament. One temptation is to think our salvation is guaranteed. The opposite temptation for others, given
their personality and temperament is to fall into despair that they are not
saveable.
Neither of
those is correct for a Catholic. Hope is
the belief that God can and wants to save me through the Catholic Church and Her
Sacraments…that if I commit some huge sin, God’s mercy is always waiting in the
confessional, that the Body and Blood Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ in the
Eucharist changes me more and more into God’s likeness each time I receive him.
Saint Paul
tells the Philippians to “work out their salvation”…this is a regular them of
Saint Paul, and again we have it in our 2nd reading today…”through
the Gospel I preached to you, you are being saved” Let us get to work on cooperating with God’s Grace
and God’s Will, so that we may one day enter the eternal bliss of Heaven.
Thank you Father
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