Tuesday, November 5, 2013

"Hell is full of good meanings, but heaven is full of good works"


An excuse is worse and more terrible than a lie, for an excuse is a lie guarded. – Pope John Paul II

Gospel Text: (LK 14:15-24)
One of those at table with Jesus said to him,
“Blessed is the one who will dine in the Kingdom of God.”
He replied to him,
“A man gave a great dinner to which he invited many.
When the time for the dinner came,
he dispatched his servant to say to those invited,
‘Come, everything is now ready.’
But one by one, they all began to excuse themselves.
The first said to him,
‘I have purchased a field and must go to examine it;
I ask you, consider me excused.’
And another said, ‘I have purchased five yoke of oxen
and am on my way to evaluate them;
I ask you, consider me excused.’
And another said, ‘I have just married a woman,
and therefore I cannot come.’
The servant went and reported this to his master.
Then the master of the house in a rage commanded his servant,
‘Go out quickly into the streets and alleys of the town
and bring in here the poor and the crippled,
the blind and the lame.’
The servant reported, ‘Sir, your orders have been carried out
and still there is room.’
The master then ordered the servant,
‘Go out to the highways and hedgerows
and make people come in that my home may be filled.
For, I tell you, none of those men who were invited will taste my dinner.’”


God wants us with him; He wants all men and women by His side, each one of us.

We must, however, yearn to go. And, despite we know quite well that Heaven is where we can be at our best, where we should stay eternally, exceeding the noblest humans ambitions —«What eye has not seen, and ear has not heard, and what has not entered the human heart, what God has prepared for those who love him» (1Cor 2:9) and, therefore, without any possible comparison—, we are, all the same, capable of refusing the divine invitation missing forever the best offering God could ever make us: to share His home, his table, his intimacy, forever and ever. What a responsibility!

Unfortunately, we are capable of swapping God for practically anything. Some, as we read in today's Gospel, for a piece of land; others, for some yoke of oxen.

And you and I, what are we willing to trade He, who is our God, and his invitation, for? There are those that out of laziness, sloppiness, convenience, refrain from fulfilling their duties of love towards God and neighbor.

Sometimes those who have already had seats reserved at the banquet through baptism unfortunately put other things ahead of actually attending and tasting the dinner God has prepared, his own Son. These are not "bad people," but people with misaligned priorities. Many of those who have stopped frequenting God's weekly banquet attest in surveys not that they rejected the Church but simply "drifted away." They've wandered precisely because they have put other things ahead of attending the Last Supper and the foretaste of the eternal wedding banquet. We pray for them. We sacrifice for them. We continue to invite them.

Let our response to the divine offering be always a YES; full of gratitude and admiration but most importantly, full of love.

1 comment:

  1. It should read,"Hell is full of good intentions but heaven is full of good decisions."

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