"One of
the criminals hanging there abused him, 'Are you not the Christ?'
he said. Save yourself and us as well.'
"But the other spoke up and rebuked him. 'Have you no fear of
God at all?' he said. 'You got the same sentence as he did, but in
our case we deserved it; we are paying for what we did. But this man
has done nothing wrong. Jesus,' he said, 'remember me when you come
into your kingdom.'
"'Indeed I promise you,' he replied, 'today you will be with
me in paradise.'"
(LUKE 23:39)
We must be cautious in
our understanding of the gospel of the Last Judgment. St. Matthew
25 : 31-46, regarding the separation of the sheep from the goats.
Jesus used that illustration in order to demonstrate the completeness
of the separation between good and evil persons, which would be
quite vivid to the persons of his time who were able to visualize
a Palestinian shepherd bringing his animals down from the hillside
and putting them to sleep for the night. Goats were black and sheep
white, the contrast being obvious.
We are not to imagine that human beings are so easily divided into
good and bad. Each person is able to be transformed entirely, until
the moment of his death. There is no division of humanity into sacred
and wicked. The thief who repented on the cross at the moment of
his death is the best testimony to our Lord's power of transforming
the total character of another being. Criminals normally do not
behave in that manner.
The reason we are told never to judge another is because we in our
criticism are denying the transforming power of Jesus Christ. Who
are we to say they will never be any better? If we really know ourselves
we know more than anything else our limitations. How dare we pass
sentence if we haven't all the facts before us?
If we call ourselves Christian, we rejoice in the power that is
in Christ to transform all that is wicked and wrong into purity
and goodness. If we deny that possibility, we deny Him. This is
why we are not permitted to despair, to lose hope, to submit to
the sickness of resignation to the status quo of the world. "Christ
is among us" we say to each other, and by that we mean that
He is at work through the Holy Spirit, in the midst of the vestiges
of corruption we see all around us.
He is able to forgive all things; in a moment He erases the past
of our soiled life, and we are given life back once more as if it
were new. Who else can offer the same? Are the young campus radicals
able to forgive, when they cannot even tolerate maturity? Are we
to rejoice that society is to collapse with no promise of redeeming
it even offered? Where in the world is there talk of forgiveness,
of redemption, of hope for the future?
The voices we are hearing are not forgiving, but of those who feel
themselves righteous; yet Christ came for the sinners. He came not
with cheap grace, a forgiveness of words, an aspirin for the cancer
of mankind. He came as God's Son with the power of forgiving, and
He won the right to forgive sins by the suffering He bore in His
body. This is how we are healed.
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
March 1970
p. 6
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