OT XXI [C]
Is 66:18-21, Heb 12:5-7, 11-13; Lk 13:22-30
In
Bethlehem, there is a wonderful Basilica called the Basilica of the Nativity.
It is the oldest church in use in the Holy Land, dating from the 6th century.
Most of the churches in the Holy Land were destroyed by the Muslims in the year
636, but this one was spared. The entrance into this ancient Basilica is not
very imposing. It is a very small and low door, which only admits one at a
time. Over the centuries, the entrance got gradually smaller to prevent people
from taking away large amounts of booty. Nowadays, the door is called the door
of humility and all but children have to lower their heads to get through it.
Just as a small, narrow door leads into the wonderful Basilica of the Nativity,
so in the gospel reading the narrow door Jesus speaks about leads into a great
feast at which people from east and west, from north and south have gathered.
Jesus’
refusal to answer the question, ‘Will there be only a few saved?’ directly
suggests that it is a wrong question. It is not for us to speculate as to who
is in and who is out. Strive to enter through the narrow door. Jesus’ reference
to a ‘narrow door’ is clearly an image. He is not talking about an actual
narrow door that can be found somewhere. To enter by a narrow door requires a
certain amount of concentration, whereas we can sail through a wide door or
gate without even noticing it. The word ‘strive’ suggests struggle and
exertion. To get through a narrow door, you need to be focused and attentive.
You need a clear vision of where you are going and a certain commitment to get
there.
This narrow
door is, in a sense, Jesus himself. On one occasion, in the gospel of John,
Jesus spoke of himself as the gate or the door. ‘I am the gate’, he says,
‘whoever enters through me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find
pasture… I came that they may have life and have it to the full’. Taking Jesus
as our gate, our door, entering through him, requires a certain effort and
focus on our part. Walking in his way, living by his values, does not happen
automatically for us. There are plenty of other doors and ways that compete for
our attention; there are other sets of values that try to engage us. We have to
consciously choose the Lord’s door before other doors that open up for us that
are easier to get through and make fewer demands on us. Much of the culture in
which we live today pulls us in very different directions from the direction
that the gospel calls us to take. The world in which we live is not always
supportive of the values of the gospel. There can be a lot of pressure on
people, some of it subtle, to act in ways that are contrary to the message of
Jesus. Choosing the narrow door, choosing the Lord, involves coming to know him
with our heart and mind, growing in our relationship with him, so that he
becomes a significant presence in our lives.
In the
gospel reading, some of Jesus’ contemporaries declared, ‘We once ate and drank
in your company; you taught in our streets’. However, Jesus suggests that that
kind of superficial relationship with him is not enough. We are to take the
Lord to heart, just as he has taken us to heart. The key question is not
whether we know about Jesus, but whether He knows us. Salvation is a
living relationship. In John 10:14, Jesus says, “I am the good shepherd; I know
my sheep and my sheep know me.” On the last day, the difference between those
inside and those outside will not be whether we have heard His teaching, but
whether He can say, “I know you.”
The
evangelical Christians are so obsessed with the notion of salvation by Faith
that they totally ignore an entire body of Jesus’ teachings that call for
commitment and sacrifice. They believe that merely by receiving baptism,
one goes to heaven whether one lives a true Christian life or not. This gospel
passage clearly refutes that theory. Enter through the narrow gate. It is true
that when you receive baptism, you are saved and are offered heaven. But you
can also lose it by renouncing it by yourself, rejecting the offer of God. You
can reject your faith and become a Muslim, the follower of the worst religion
in the world. But when you come back, you don’t need to be rebaptized because
God did not revoke his promise of giving you heaven. God will still keep his
promise; we are the ones denying it for ourselves, not God. God will not drag
anyone to heaven against one’s choice.
Our going
through that narrow door is not all down to our own efforts and striving. Our
efforts are contained within the Lord’s effort on our behalf. Jesus said of
himself: ‘When I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw all people to
myself’. The Lord is always drawing us through that narrow door that leads to
life. He is not standing on the far side of the door looking at our efforts in
some kind of detached way. Rather, he is continually engaged and involved with
us. In the first reading, the Lord, speaking through the prophet Isaiah,
states: ‘I am going to gather the nations of every language’. The door may be
narrow, but the Lord is going to pull through that door large numbers from
every language and culture. In the gospel reading, Jesus speaks of people from
east and west, from north and south who take their place at the feast on the
far side of the narrow door in the kingdom of God. There is an implicit answer
here to the question that was put to Jesus in the gospel reading, ‘Will only a
few be saved?’ The answer to that question is ‘no’. People from the four
corners of the earth will get through that door, and some of those who get
through may surprise us, ‘those now last will be first’.
Let’s pray today
for the grace to live out our baptismal promises and prepare ourselves to enter
through the narrow gate by prayer, supplication and constant renunciation of
our sinful desires and by following Jesus who said: “If anyone desires to come
after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me” (
Lk 9:23).