Rev.
Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.
LEARN
TO DIE FROM THE THINGS OF THIS PASSING WORLD IN ORDER TO LIVE FOR THINGS OF
HEAVEN
Sometimes
I ask myself if we have really taken time to reflect on where all of us and the
beautiful things of this world will be in the next ten, twenty, forty, eighty
and hundred years for those who are strong? I believe the answer to this
question will leave a deep silence in our soul as it exposed the foolishness of
human greed and selfishness.
For the
way people are so much engrossed with acquiring the things of this passing
world at the detriment of things that edifice their soul, makes me to wonder if
we are actually learning anything from the lives of those who have passed away
from this world.
Little
wonder Jesus in our Gospel passage today tells us that unless a wheat grain
falls on the ground and dies, it remains only a single grain; but if it dies,
it yields a rich harvest. For anyone who loves his life loses it; anyone who
hates his life in this world will keep it for the eternal life.
Here,
Jesus is telling us that the only way to save our lives is by total detachment
from the things of this passing world. That we must sacrifice the pleasurable
things of this world for the sake of the heavenly kingdom, because they are not
going to follow us when the time comes for us to leave this world. For
attachment to things of this world is nothing but a distraction from the things
of heaven.
Therefore,
what are the things I value so much that needs to die in order for me to live
more fully in Christ? Because like a wheat grain we must sacrifice by dying to
the things of this world in order to yield fruit that will sustain us for eternity.
Hence, we need to ask ourselves today, what does God requires from us in this
world? Why are we in this world and where are we going from this world?
Dear
friends, all that the Lord wants from us is to serve him, to love him and to
love our neighbours as well. And Jesus says in our Gospel, If a man serves me,
he must follow me, wherever I am, my servant will be there too. For if anyone
serves me, my Father will honour him. This is exactly what St. Lawrence whose
memorial we celebrate today did.
For
Lawrence was one of the deacons of Rome and as such was greatly involved in the
many important decisions and works in the very heart of the Church in Rome.
During persecution, St. Lawrence was confronted by the Roman prefect through
Emperor Valerian, who demanded that he surrender all the properties and
material wealth of the Church.
Lawrence
assembling before the Emperor, all the poor the infirm, the sick and the
destitute, and presented all of them before the Roman prefect as the true
property and wealth of the Church. Then, the Emperor was filled with anger, he
ordered that Lawrence should be arrested, imprisoned, and eventually was
martyred by being roasted alive on a gridiron, which was made even hotter by
the anger of the prefects.
As
they where burning him, he joked and asked his torturers to turn him over since
he was "done" enough on that side. The deacon cheerfully offered
himself to the Lord Jesus. Tradition has it that all of Rome became Christian
as a result of the faithful life, and the death, of this one humble deacon, who
let the seed of his life to die in order to yield rich Heavenly harvest.
Today
the life of St. Lawrence is a great encouragement to us, calling us to the
sacrificial life of love for God, the poor and the Church. And St. Paul in our
first reading today tells us about the great rewards awaiting all those who had
been generous in giving and loving the poor and the needy. For the one who
provides seed for the sower and bread for food will provide us with all the seed
we need and make the harvest of our good deeds a larger one, just like St.
Lawrence who showed us great example by
his great generosity, love, genuine concern for the poor and the Church.
LET US
PRAY: Lord God, Today, we saw in St. Lawrence a great example of how to live,
and how to die faithfully to the Gospel. As we reflect on his life, may we come
to love you the more and strive to detach ourselves from the negative influence
of pleasurable things of this passing world. We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen. Do have a blessed day.
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