But it shall not be so among you: but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant: even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many. (St. Matthew 20. 26,27) Today we celebrate the Feast of St. James the Apostle. Tradition has it that St. James is the kinsmen or relative of our Lord Jesus Christ, often called St. James the Great or St. James the Just. St. James was the brother of St. John, a son of Zebedee, who was a fisherman and one of the first followers of Jesus. With his brother John, he was called a Son of thunder. He, his brother, and Peter were the only Apostles to be taken up Mount Tabor to witness the Transfiguration of Our Lord. He with them alone witnessed the Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane. The Acts of the Apostles tells us that Herod Agrippa, Vassal of Rome, ended his life by the sword –a curious method of execution since Jews or non-Romans were normally killed by crucifixion. Perhaps the explanation is that he was a Hellenized Jew, and thus as a citizen of the Roman Empire. It is said that his remains rest in the Church of Santiago de Compestella, in Galicia, Spain, where in 2015 some 262, 460 pilgrims travelled to thank God for his life. Finally, what remains to us from his own experience is his Epistle, which we find towards the end of our New Testament, and scholars remind us that it is written in some of the most beautiful Greek ever penned. From the Epistle of St. James we derive a singularly beautiful and simple exhortation to the Christian life. His Epistle is not long, is bereft of high theology, but provides, perhaps, one of the most straightforward entreaties to participation in the life of the Blessed Trinity. For St. James, the ascended Jesus Christ who is seated at the right hand of the Father intends that His Incarnation should continue in the hearts of His friends to ensure their salvation. The Incarnation of Jesus Christ is the door through which fallen man can enter once again into communion with God who is the Father of all. For St. James, God the Father’s Word was made flesh and dwelt among us in the historical life of Jesus so that He might re-consecrate human nature to God by sharing His obedience to the Father by imparting Holy Spirit. We might say that St. James provides us with the way of life that alone can ensure our redemption and our salvation. You will remember that he says that every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. (St. James 1.17) For St. James the way to unbreakable union with God the Father is found in the gift of Christ’s ever-condescending presence. Christ descends to us first historically and then spiritually. Both movements comprise the one movement of the Father’s intention to save us. Of his own will begat he us with the Word of truth, that we should be a kind of first fruits of his creatures. As the eternally-begotten Son of God came to live and die for us, so we should evidence and manifest His victory over sin and death by participating in His Resurrection and becoming the first fruits in the new harvest of His spiritual creation. The same Word of God, begotten of the Father, should, in other words, be begotten or generated in us, that we too might be called the sons of God, or even with James and John the sons of thunder. For St. James new life means the of Jesus Christ that alone saves. No doubt it is difficult for us to imagine the overwhelming heaviness and weight of Glory that St. James finds in the condescending Word of God. We live in an age of compartmentalization. We work to make money and support families, and we rest to enjoy the surplus of the one once we met the needs of the other. What we do depends wholly on what we have materially. We wake and sleep, we work and play, we shop and garden, and so on. And while none of these things is necessarily antithetical to faith in God and fulfilment of His will, St. James insists that all of this must be measured by and adjusted to the gift of God’s Grace and the thoughts of His heart. St. James reminds us that our lives come from God and that if we would live them well, we had better be obedient to His will. Living the good life for a Christian means doing God’s will through the generation of moral goodness. Moral goodness is man’s response to the gift of God’s Grace. God’s Grace has a claim on our lives. The emotional appreciation of His gift without willful submission results in our spiritual ruination and demise. Of course, moral goodness is God’s nature and thus will always be greater and nobler than what we can imagine or obtain. Yet it is precisely in this way that faith continues to seek after it as what can only stand to always make us better. Moral goodness is moral perfection, and Christ Jesus came to the earth to impart that reality to us. It is nothing less than God’s glory. Religions other than Christianity don’t have much to do with it. If they do, because they find that it is God’s uniquely, they find little reason to believe that it can be man’s practically. Jesus Christ reveals to us the moral perfection of God that belongs to our true lives. (Canon Stone) Christ Jesus is not only the eternally-begotten Word and Wisdom of God, but he is the Perfect Man. But He is not only this. For even great men fail, teachers can be wrong, and philosophers can miss the mark easily. Christ Jesus invites us to participate in His Manhood through His Godhead. Christ Jesus manifests and reveals, through his Manhood, the Goodness of God, and that His Manhood is nothing without it. He offers to us the life of God through the Humanity, which He has redeemed and reconciled to God. Moral goodness is the life of Jesus Christ. It shines out of His heart and longs to leap and dance within the hearts of His friends and followers, like the blessed St. James. Yet it must not find any resting place there. Because it is true life, its intention is to emanate and flow not only into but out of the deepest core of man’s being. It is imparted so that it might take root, grow up, flower, and fruit into the life of a disciple and friend of the Master. The true disciple, like St. James the Apostle, is one into whom Jesus Christ imparts his life. Jesus Christ longs to take the disposition which He receives always as Gift from the Father of lights and to infuse it into the hearts of those who are His friends. Jesus knows that if we treat him as Teacher and Ethicist only, we shall come to despair. The natural man cannot generate any lasting goodness naturally. As long as we are moved by the self-conceited and self-righteous notion that we can follow Him and can perfect His teaching, we forget what manner of men that we are…and are like the waves of the sea driven and tempest tossed by the desperate flailing of our own unruly and undisciplined wills. But when we come to know and experience the true limitations of our fallen natures, when we know that the good that we would do, we do not, and the evil that we would not do, we do, and do and do (Rom. vii. 19), we then become poor men and paupers, who know that every good gift and every gift cometh from above, from the Father of Lights. (Idem) We then say, I cannot do any good thing, and Jesus says, Blessed are you. Now you stand on the moral frontier that leads into the kingdom of God. Now you are ready to receive the Grace that the Father has given to me and is destined for you. Now I will fill you with His Goodness. Now you shall receive my Father’s loving power, and being moved and defined by it, you will express and manifest it in those thoughts, words, and deeds that will call others, because I am in you and you are in me, and because we both are in our Heavenly Father. (Summary: July 21, My Utmost…Chambers) Our sanctification is our growth in the goodness of God. Our progress is the extent to which Christ lives in us. He offers to us the same faith, holiness, patience, love, purity, and godliness that He offered to St. James and the Apostolic Band. He offers to us the same power through which He is intent upon continuing the work that began in His earthly Incarnation and is to continue in us. Will we endeavor to receive the fullness of His life? Will we dwell in Him, and He is us, so that we might reach the kingdom prepared for us? Will we, as servants and ministers, serve up the Gifts of His presence to all whom we encounter, counting it nothing less than blessing to minister and serve up His wisdom, power, and love to all others? Christ intends to consume us with the fire of His obedient love to the Father. Christ intends that with St. James His redemption in our lives should become the measure and meaning of our relations with our neighbors. It will not do to hoard our salvation confidence and spiritual progress. At any rate, such would not be Christian progress at all. We are called to share and impart with our fellow men what Christ is bringing alive in us! To that point, let us close with Duke Vicentio’s exhortation to Angelo in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure: Thyself and thy belongings Are not thine own so proper as to waste Thyself upon thy virtues, they on thee. Heaven doth with us as we with torches do, Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if we had them not. (Measure for Measure, Act I, Scene I) Amen. Comments are closed.
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St. Michael and All Angels Sermons:
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