Friday, May 20, 2011

The narrow gate

To believe in Christ's words and deeds is easy, for it only involves believing in our hearts and confessing with our tongues. But the test of the truth of our faith is by our deeds and behavior. After faith comes the "narrow gate" and the hard way, which everyone who has believed in Christ must go through. The narrow gate is the critical point at which one crosses from the wide way, which leads to destruction, to the hard way, which leads to life. It is where the heart and conscience are examined in the light of the cross.

The worst enemies hidden within a believer are hatred, feuding, anger, judgment—including judging others without judging oneself—defaming others, and trying to remove the speck out of their eyes while ignoring the log fixed in the pupil of one's own eye (cf. Matthew 7:3).

Unfortunately, there are those who find these sins insignificant and are oblivious to them. They are unaware that these sins have become part of their nature. They practice them shamelessly as if Scripture and the Day of Judgment did not exist—as if there were no narrow gate in front of them.

Faith to them will be of no use, because those who behave in such a way have trampled on love, despising and abusing it.

Love is God. It is the testimony to the true Faith and its effectiveness. Christ's teachings will always remain on a higher plane than that which the human race will ever attain to, even by its utmost efforts, in order that humanity may ever remain penitent before God and Christ, and therefore, hold fast to Divine Grace.

“Remember who your teachers were…”
2 Timothy 3:14

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I never before understood the narrow way quite like this: the examination of the heart and conscience: which is based on what we thought about and what we did. Yes, behavior matters: because through our deeds we demonstrate our love or our hatred. As for the feuding and the defamation: my God! this is the stuff of church history! And it often continues to be the stuff of jurisdictional strife and local parish squabbles. Let us each hack away at our own log!

Sasha said...

My beloved abouna Matta. :)
Somehow I'm also sure this division between us and Copts only exists here, on the "Church military" side.