Honest
reflection upon each of these examples will make us realize the magnitude of
God’s gifts. All the priests and levites who served the altar of God were
descended from Jacob. The manhood of the Lord Jesus derived from him. Through
the tribe of Judah, kings, princes and rulers sprang from him. Nor are his
other tribes without their honour, for God promised Abraham: “Your descendants
shall be as the stars of heaven.”
It
is obvious, therefore, that none of these owed their honour and exaltation to
themselves, or to their own labours, or to their deeds of virtue. No; they owed
everything to God’s will. So likewise with us, who by his will are called in
Christ Jesus. We are not justified by our wisdom, intelligence, piety, or by
any action of ours, however holy, but by faith, the one means by which God has
justified men from the beginning. To him be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
What
must we do then, brothers? Give up good works? Stop practicing Christian love?
God forbid! We must be ready and eager for every opportunity to do good, and
put our whole heart into it. Even the Creator and Lord of the universe rejoices
in his works. By his supreme power he set the heavens in their place; by his
infinite wisdom he gave them their order. He separated the land from the waters
surrounding it and made his own will its firm foundation. By his command he brought
to life the beasts that roam the earth. He created the sea and all its living
creatures, and then by his power set bounds to it. Finally, with his own holy
and undefiled hands, he formed man, the highest and most intelligent of his
creatures, the copy of his own image. “Let us make man,” God said, “in our
image and likeness. And God made man, male and female he made them.” Then, when
he had finished making all his creatures, God gave them his approval and
blessing: “Increase and multiply,” he charged them.
We
must recognize, therefore, that all upright men have been graced by good works,
and that even the Lord himself took delight in the glory his works gave him.
This should inspire us with a resolute determination to do his will and make us
put our whole strength into the work of living a Christian life.
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a letter to the Corinthians by Saint Clement I, pope
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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