For Love of Christ,
Paul Bore Every Burden
Thus, amid the traps set for him by his enemies, with exultant heart he turned their every attack into a victory for himself; constantly beaten, abused and cursed, he boasted of it as though he were celebrating a triumphal procession and taking trophies home, and offered thanks to God for it all: Thanks be to God who is always victorious in us! This is why he was far more eager for the shameful abuse that his zeal in preaching brought upon him than we are for the most pleasing honours, more eager for death than we are for life, for poverty than we are for wealth; he yearned for toil far more than others yearn for rest after toil. The one thing he feared, indeed dreaded, was to offend God; nothing else could sway him. Therefore, the only thing he really wanted was always to please God.
The
most important thing of all to him, however, was that he knew himself to be
loved by Christ. Enjoying this love, he considered himself happier than anyone
else; were he without it, it would be no satisfaction to be the friend of
principalities and powers. He preferred to be thus loved and be the least of
all, or even to be among the damned, than to be without that love and be among
the great and honoured.
To
be separated from that love was, in his eyes, the greatest and most
extraordinary of torments; the pain of that loss would alone have been hell,
and endless, unbearable torture.
So
too, in being loved by Christ he thought of himself as possessing life, the
world, the angels, present and future, the kingdom, the promise and countless
blessings. Apart from that love nothing saddened or delighted him; for nothing
earthly did he regard as bitter or sweet.
Paul
set no store by the things that fill our visible world, any more than a man
sets value on the withered grass of the field. As for tyrannical rulers or the
people enraged against him, he paid them no more heed than gnats. Death itself
and pain and whatever torments might come were but child’s play to him,
provided that thereby he might bear some burden for the sake of Christ.
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a homily by Saint John Chrysostom, bishop
Photo taken from Fergal Jennings
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