Dear Sisters, dear brethren, all our Scripture readings today have been unusually long, and require a lot of concentration. For that reason, I hope to be as concise as possible in contrast to the readings, and for what I say to be concentrated so as not to require you to concentrate too much after all you have already listened to.
Therefore, rather than try to tease out all the details one by one, which would take a very long time indeed, I want to try and bring everything to a head, in order to show you the common strand running through everything in the readings.
In many ways, it is the collect prayer which excellently does this for us. That prayer I will repeat for you now in full: ‘Almighty ever-living God, whom, taught by the Holy Spirit, we dare to call our Father, bring, we pray, to perfection in our hearts the spirit of adoption as your sons and daughters, that we may merit to enter into the inheritance which you have promised.’
This prayer is a summary of the spiritual life of faith, its journey and its fulfilment. Note how it begins: ‘Almighty God, whom… we dare to call our Father’; this recalls for us the words with which the celebrant at Mass invites all the faithful who are present to pray the Lord’s Prayer, beginning ‘Our Father…’ But the collect has also reminded us of another very important thing that we often overlook: that we make this prayer not only because the Saviour has taught us how to pray, but in particular because the Holy Spirit has taught us that we can pray. St Paul reminds us that the Holy Spirit helps us to pray when we do not know how to. He puts our petitions into words that far surpass our poor human language and narrow ideas of what we need. He takes our prayers and perfects them, as a craftsman might take a lump of wood or stone which we might give to him, and from it produces a magnificent piece of art. The Holy Spirit works on us and on our poor words in just such a way, presenting us to God the Father as the children whom He has not only created, but even more than that, has made His sons and daughters, co-heirs with His Only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ.
We make all our prayers, as we say at Mass, through Jesus Christ our Lord. This means that we know we cannot ourselves make prayers worthy to be presented to God, unaided. The Holy Spirit inspires and helps us, while it is the Son who has become one with us by becoming Mary’s son, and joining our frail human nature to His all-powerful divine nature as God. Through Christ our Lord, not through our own merits or power, that is how we pray to God. This should encourage us to have faith in Him, because God will hardly wish to ignore or refuse the prayers of His own Son and Holy Spirit when they pray for our needs.
Christ became man so that we might become like God Himself in goodness and glory. God the Father does this by adopting us as His sons and daughters. It is difficult for us to realise this, but God actually longs to see us as though we were actually His own sons and daughters by nature, so to speak, to see in all of us an ever stronger resemblance to Christ. We love to see resemblances among family members. Such likenesses tend to make those who bear them even more dear to us for the sake of those whom we love that they look like, or speak like, or walk like. So it is with our God. He asked His Son to come into the world ‘as one like us in all things, sin only excepted’, so that He might see and love in us what He sees and loves in His Son made man. And just as God the Father asked this of His Son, so His Son answered, ‘Behold, I am coming at your will,’ meaning that He accepted His Father’s request to become man in order to make all of us sharers in His nature.
Again, there is a prayer we use at Mass which beautifully expresses this: ‘may we come to share in the divinity of Him who humbled Himself to share in our humanity.’ This, then, is our faith. We do not fully see it yet. This life is still beset with darkness and difficulty. We cannot see God as He is, nor can we see what, as He desires, we shall one day be. For this reason we pray to ‘our Father’ that He will show Himself to us constantly as a Father. We ask Him in the Holy Spirit to increase our faith – our firm conviction that He will fulfil in us what He has promised through the outpouring of the gifts of grace which come from the Holy Spirit.
God wants in this way to build up in us a sense of longing for our true homeland and destiny in heaven. It is this of which the second reading spoke at some length. Here we are strangers and nomads, in the sense that our minds and appetites are unsettled; they wander about looking for an answer to satisfy our longings but cannot find them in anything this world has to offer. The truth is that only God can satisfy our longing for fulfilment. Our faith really consists in this sense that we cannot be who we are really called to be except in union with Him, that is with the Father who has made us for Himself, with the Son who has shared our human nature, and with the Spirit who shows us the direction in which we should shape our lives and understand our longings.
Our Lord in the Gospel tells us that we have no need to fear, because ‘it has pleased the Father to give you the kingdom’, that is, His own realm. So when He goes on to tell us to sell our possessions and to be dressed for action with lamps lit, He means not for us to deprive ourselves of anything important, but the opposite, to discover the real treasure of faith in Him, the promise of being waited on by Him in person. It is in this way that we hope to merit to enter into the inheritance which God the Father has promised, as the collect put it. Faith is the key that unlocks our relationship of complete trust in God, and of our growing in likeness to Him. When our Lord speaks in the Gospel of ‘staying awake’, He means not growing lazy and worldly, as it would be so easy to do if we did not remain faithful to our life of faith in the Mass and the sacraments, especially confession, which is the sacrament by which God shapes our growth and prunes away all that makes us unlike Christ and unworthy to share His inheritance.
All the severity of our Lord’s final words in the Gospel need to be heard and understood in the light of our being formed to share in this inheritance. God is not severe like a cruel step-father in a fairy story, but as a truly loving Father, ‘our Father’, who gives us the Holy Spirit to shape us into the likeness of His Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. For unless we become like Him, we can never enter into our heavenly inheritance, our true, heavenly homeland, which He has promised us and which, by faith, we learn here to long for.