In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost.
In one of the Psalms we can read the following
words: Those who have sown with tears will reap with
joy... If in the course of weeks of preparation we
have seen all that is ugly and unworthy in us
mirrored in the parables, if we have stood before
the judgement of our conscience and of our God, then
we have truly sown in tears our own salvation. And
yet, there is still time because even when we enter
into the time of the harvest, God gives us a
respite; as we progress towards the Kingdom of God,
towards the Day of the Resurrection, we still can,
at every moment, against the background of
salvation, in the face of the victory of God, turn
to Him with gratitude and yet, brokenheartedness,
and say, ‘No, Lord! I am perhaps the worker of the
eleventh hour, but receive me as Thou promised to
do!’
Last week we have kept the day of the Triumph of
Orthodoxy, the day when the Church proclaimed that
it was legitimate and right to paint icons of
Christ; it was not a declaration about art, it was a
deeply theological proclamation of the Incarnation.
The Old Testament said to us that God cannot be
represented by any image because He was unbottomed
mystery; He had even no Name except the mysterious
name which only the High Priest know. But in the New
Testament we have learned, and we know from
experience that God has become Man, that the
fullness of the Godhead has abided and is still
abiding forever in the flesh; and therefore God has
a human name: Jesus, and He has got a human face
that can be represented in icons. An icon is
therefore a proclamation of our certainty that God
has become man; and He has become man to achieve
ultimate, tragic and glorious solidarity with us, to
be one of us that we may be one of the children of
God. He has become man that we may become gods, as
the Scripture tells us. And so, we could last week
already rejoice; and this is why, a week before,
when we were already preparing to meet this miracle,
this wonder of the Incarnation, softly, in an almost
inaudible way, the Church was singing the canon of
Easter: Christ is risen from the dead! - because it
is not a promise for the future, it is a certainty
of the present, open to us like a door for us to
enter through Christ, the Door as He calls Himself,
into eternity.
And today we remember the name of Saint Gregory
Palamas, one of the great Saints of Orthodoxy, who
against heresy and doubt, proclaimed, from within
the experience of the ascetics and of all believers,
proclaimed that the grace of God is not a created
Gift - it is God Himself, communicating Himself to
us so that we are pervaded by His presence, that we
gradually, if we only receive Him, open ourselves to
Him, become transparent or at least translucent to
His light, that we become incipiently and ever
increasingly partakers of the Divine nature.
This is not simply a promise; this is a certainty
which we have because this has happened to thousands
and thousands of those men and women whom we
venerate as the Saints of God: they have become
partakers of the Divine nature, they are to us a
revelation and certainty of what we are called to be
and become.
And today one step more brings us into the joy, the
glory of Easter. In a week’s time we will sing the
Cross - the Cross which was a terror for the
criminals, and has become now a sign of victory and
salvation, because it is to us the sign that God’s
love has no measure, no limits, is as deep as God is
deep, all-embracing as God is all-embracing, and
indeed, as tragically victorious as God is both
tragic and victorious, awe-inspiring, and shining
the quiet, joyful light which we sing in Vespers.
Let us then make ourselves ready to meet this event,
the vision of the Cross, look at it, and see in it
the sign of the Divine love, a new certainty of our
possible salvation; and when the choir sings this
time more loudly the canon of the Resurrection, let
us realise that step by step God leads us into a
victory which He has won, and which He wants to
share with us.
And then we will move on; we will listen to the
Saint who teaches us how to receive the grace which
God is offering, how to become worthy of Him; and a
step more - and we will see the victory of God in
Saint Mary of Egypt and come to the threshold of
Holy Weak. But let us remember that we are now in
the time of newness, a time when God's victory is
been revealed to us, that we are called to be
enfolded by it, to respond to it by gratitude, a
gratitude that will make us into new people - and
also with joy! And joy full of tears in response to
the love of God, and a joy which is a responsible
answer to the Divine love. Amen! |