Fifth Sunday
after Easter
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
10th May 2015
Confidence in
the Providence of God by St. John Chrysostom
O man, do not be
inquisitive about the common Master of us all. But if you
are so contentious and daring as to rage with such madness,
then wait for the final outcome of events. For if the farmer
waits the whole winter, considering not what the wheat is
undergoing during the time of frost, but the benefit he will
get from it, much more so, before Him who cultivates the
whole world, as well as our souls, is it fitting for you to
wait for the final outcome. But by outcome I do not mean
only the outcome in the present life - for often it will be
here, as well - but also that in the life to come. God's
economy is directed toward a single end in each of these
lives: our salvation and good repute. Even if it is divided
in two with regard to time, it is united with regard to
objective. Just as at first it is winter and then it is
spring, and the passage of each season has a single goal -
the ripening of the fruit - so it is with our affairs.
Therefore, when you
see the Church scattered, undergoing the utmost sufferings,
its prominent members attacked and flogged, its leader
carried afar off, consider not only these things, but also
the things that will result from them: the rewards, the
compensations, the prizes, the awards. He that endureth to
the end shall be saved, says the Lord (Matt. 10:22). In the
time of the Old Covenant, when the teaching on the
Resurrection was not yet well known, both things came to
pass in the present life. But in the time of the New
Covenant, this is not always so. Rather, there are instances
where there are painful things here in this life, and the
good things await our departure from here.
Nevertheless, since
under the Old Covenant the good things of life were coming
to pass for them in this present life, especially admirable
are they who did not enjoy these good things, since without
clearly knowing the teaching on the Resurrection, and seeing
events occurring which were contrary to the promises of God,
they were not scandalised, they were not thrown into
confusion, they were not troubled. Rather, they submitted
themselves to God's incomprehensible providence, not being scandalised by adverse events. Knowing the resourcefulness
and inventiveness of His Wisdom, they waited for the end.
Moreover, everything that was done to them before the end
they endured with thankfulness, and they continued to
glorify the God Who allowed these things to take place.
|