Sunday, November 10 (October 28), 2024
20th Sunday after Pentecost
Gal. 1:11-19, Lk. 7:11-16
When the Lord saw a mother lamenting the death of her son, “He had compassion on her”[Lk. 7:13]; on another occasion, when invited to a wedding, He rejoiced with the entire family [Jn. 2:1-11]. Thus He has shown that sharing joys and sorrows of common human life is in no way contrary to His spirit.
The same also can be said about true, pious Christians which conduct their lives in the fear of God. However, in the daily course of life they discern between practices and customs of a diverse nature, since there have emerged numerous qualities which cannot be possibly blessed by the Lord. Some common customs are caused by sinful passions and have been created only to cater to them; other customs simply fan human vanity.
If you keep the spirit of Christ, you can always tell good from evil, holding on to the former, rejecting the latter. If you do this with the fear of God, people will never shun you, even though you will be different from them: they will always feel your love and compassion to the weaknesses of your brethren. What irritates everyone and stirs up discord and wrangling is the spirit of undue zeal and arrogance: it would never miss a chance to dictate, reproach and pester anyone around.
A true believer is concerned with himself and his family: how to set and stay on the right Christian track. He wouldn’t sticks his nose into someone else’s business: “Who has made me their judge?” ─ says he to himself, thus making everyone respect both himself and the way of life he is following. Quite unlike that is an arrogant zealot: in people around him he provokes dislike of himself and disapproval of whatever good practices and customs he might advocate. What is necessary here is humility, plain Christian humility: it is the source of the Christian common sense, our sure guide in questions and concerns of the everyday life.