St- Andre-Rublev's Saviour
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Holy Redeemer
In the care of the Ecumenical Franciscan Order
Homily preached at Winmalee:
by Brother Simeon Sunday 23rd
February 2014
Gospel: Mt 5:38-48
“You, therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is Perfect”
“O Lord, open our eyes To
behold your presence. O Lord, open our ears to hear your voice. O Lord, open
our hearts to receive your love.
O Lord, help us to behold, to hear and to receive you in Word and Sacrament
That our mouths may proclaim your praise.” Amen.
O Lord, help us to behold, to hear and to receive you in Word and Sacrament
That our mouths may proclaim your praise.” Amen.
“You be perfect, even as your heavenly
Father is perfect”. This sounds like an
impossible command but should we understand it as a command at all? Would it
not be more helpful to consider it as an invitation to share in the life of
God? Jesus is not ordering us to be perfect like some policeman ordering us to
cross the road. He is sharing with us the secret of His life.
Jesus
declared the highest possible standard for His followers: they must be
“perfect.” “You be perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew
5:48). The righteousness that Jesus demanded is nothing less than complete
conformity to God’s perfect law in everything a person is and does. Jesus is
concerned, not only with our behaviour, but with the righteousness of the
heart, also. The scribes and Pharisees considered only the outward compliance.
With Jesus’ standard who would ever claim to have reached it?
The very nature
of the kingdom of God as taught by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount drives us
to despair of ourselves in living this kind of life so that we will turn in
faith to Jesus Christ and find new life in Him to live as He lived.
The Holy
Spirit produces this kind of life in the believer as we make ourselves
available to His indwelling presence. God produces in us by His power what we
cannot do ourselves. It is the product of the new life of Christ in us (Eph.
2:10; Phil. 2:13). This way only God can possibly get the glory because we can
live it only by His power.
This
righteousness is God given. But Jesus also went a step further and declared;
“You are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matt. 5:48). The
statement is in the form of a command; “You shall therefore be perfect, even as
your heavenly Father is perfect.”
You may be
asking, “Then why even try to become perfect?”
The
main reason is because that is what God commands of us, “You are to be perfect,
as your heavenly Father is perfect.”
To
be perfect is to reach the goal for which a person was designed. Jesus calls
His disciples to become mature, reaching the high standard God has for them.
We are to be constantly pressing on toward attaining that goal.
Another
reason is because with the new life of Christ in us we want to become like
Christ. We are a new creation, and all things have been made new. We have received as a gift from God an
imputed righteousness that was purchased for us by Jesus on the cross. It is
impossible for us to be saved without this righteousness that God alone
provides for the believing sinner.
The
only way we can be completely conformed to the law this side of eternity is by
this imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ. “Abraham believed God and it was
reckoned to him for righteousness” (Gen. 15:6). No human being can earn this
righteous standing before God. There is nothing we can possibly do that will
atone for our sins . There is no human detergent that can cleanse the guilty
conscience and make a person right with God. Nothing can wash away our sin but
the blood of Jesus. Jesus poured out His blood on our behalf.
Do
we become sinlessly perfect so that we never sin again in this life? No. We
will sin and God has provided a cleansing that works and restores our
fellowship with God. “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and
righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness”.
Those who
“hunger and thirst for righteousness” will be satisfied one day when we enter
into glory with Christ Jesus in heaven. It will be realised in us when we see
Jesus face to face in glory. It will be perfectly fulfilled when we see Jesus
and not before then.
Jesus
demanded the sincere devotion of the heart to God. We must love Him with all
our mind, heart and personal being. If we truly love Him we will keep His
commandments.
In the
Christian life we always have before us something for which to strive. No
matter how far we have progressed in our spiritual life there is still more to
conquer. We must bring every thought, every attitude and every behaviour into
subjection to Christ.
Though we
will never be perfect in this life, we are to aim and strive at Christ-like
character. By God's grace and the power of the Holy Spirit we are to move
toward that goal every day of our life.
Our goal in
ministry whether we are clergy or laity, or even just the ordinary
Christian, is that “we may present every
man complete (perfect) in Christ”.
Amen.