Though I thought that I had toiled in vain, and for nothing,
uselessly, spent my strength,
Yet my reward is with the Lord: my recompense is with my
God…
I will make you a light to the nations,
that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth.
Isaiah 49: 3-6
A hermit was asked by a brother, “How do I find God? With
fasts or labour, or vigils, or works of mercy?” He replied, “ you will find him
in all those, and lso in discretion. I tell you many have been very stern with
their bodies, but have gained nother by
it because they did it without discretion. Even if our mouths stink from
fasting, and we have learnt all the Scriptures, and memorized the whole
psalter, we may still lack what God wants, humility and love.”
(DF
111)
. . .
Isn’t it the measure of humility to think we have not achieved anything? Isaiah reflects on precisely this predicament: ‘I thought
that I had toiled in vain’; that all was for nought. But it is in the
acknowledgement that all he can do is work ‘uselessly’ that he finds the truth:
recompence is with God. Because it is God’s will that God’s salvation reach the
ends of the earth, God makes something of out otherwise useless toil. So, as
the hermit says, all the fasting and prayer avail us nothing without the marks
of true participation in the Spirit—humility and love. And what a good and timely
word for this, the last week in Lent. We have fasted and abstained, we have
spent time in Scripture and in prayer, we have done works of mercy. But what do
we gain by it all? Nothing, so long as we expect the work to get us somewhere.
The object of all the Lenten discipline we choose to bear is nothing more or
less than the deepening of humility and the widening of our love.
Humility and love should point us towards the cross, where
Christ’s humility is displayed in the utmost submission, and his love is
extended even in his suffering: ‘Father, forgive them, for they know not what
they do.’ Humility and love: forgiving before the repentance, before the
acknowledgement of sin. Jesus shows us pure forgiveness, which is the way of
humility and love. And so I find myself coming around again to forgiveness,
although it appears nowhere in the lectionary readings for today; it is
nevertheless what the Lenten season is all about: humility and love.
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