Each Man's Reward
will be Suited to What He Does
The Lord says: Unless
your justice exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into
the kingdom of heaven. How
indeed can justice exceed, unless compassion rises above judgement?
What is as right or as worthy as a creature, fashioned in the image and
likeness of God, imitating his Creator who, by the remission of sins, brought
about the reparation and sanctification of believers? With strict vengeance
removed and the cessation of all punishment, the guilty man was restored to
innocence, and the end of wickedness became the beginning of virtue. Can
anything be more just than this?
This is how Christian
justice can exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees, not by cancelling out the
law but by rejecting earthly wisdom. This is why, in giving his disciples a
rule for fasting, the Lord said: Whenever you fast do not become sad like the
hypocrites. For they disfigure their faces in order to seem to be fasting. Amen
I say to you, they have received their reward. What reward but that of human praise?
Such a desire often puts on a mask of justice, for where there is no concern
for conscience, untruthful reputation gives pleasure. The result is that
concealed injustice enjoys a false reputation.
For the man who loves
God it is sufficient to please the one he loves; and there is no greater
recompense to be sought than the loving itself; for love is from God by the
very fact that God himself is love. The good and chaste soul is so happy to be
filled with him that it desires to take delight in nothing else. For what the
Lord says is very true: Where your treasure is, there also will your
heart be. What is a man’s
treasure but the heaping up of profits and the fruit of his toil? For
as a man sows, so will he reap, and each man’s gain matches his toil;
and where delight and enjoyment are found, there the heart’s desire is
attached. Now there are many kinds of wealth and a variety of grounds for
rejoicing; every man’s treasure is that which he desires. If it is based on
earthly ambitions, its acquisition makes men not blessed but wretched.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a sermon of Pope St Leo the Great
Image taken from Wikimedia Commons
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