Today’s Gospel is one of the most famous passages of the New
Testament, if not the entire bible—the beatitudes. Yet, I’d like to focus on the first reading,
from the Second Letter of St. Paul to the Corinthians, because we’ll be reading
second Corinthians for the next two weeks.
We know Paul recognized many problems in the Christian
community at Corinth. They were pretty
dysfunctional and were engaging in a number of practices which were totally
incongruent with the Christian life.
Paul founded the church at Corinth around 50 AD, spending
about 18 months there establishing a community of believers consisting of both
Gentiles and converts from Judaism. It’s
thought that Paul actually wrote four letters to the community and
Corinth. Because in his first letter he
makes reference to an earlier correspondence in which he urges them not to
associate with immoral people. So first
Corinthians is actually his second letter, and second Corinthians, is actually
fourth Corinthians. Between his second
and third letter, Paul made an emergency visit to Corinth to settle disputes
and to confront a member of the community who was slandering him.
Second Corinthians was written as a sort of prelude to his
third and final visit to Corinth. It
seems that after his second visit, there was some real reconciliation within
the community, and so this letter is to express his joy that the Gospel was
finally beginning to take real root in the hearts of the Christians there.
So this letter is going to be filled with much encouragement,
but will also deal with some enduring pastoral problems.
We heard the very opening of the letter today: Paul
addresses the community as the Church of God that is in Corinth—reminding the
Corinthians of their divine origin—they owe their existence to God, and
challenging them to realize that they belong to something much larger than
themselves.
They have been called out of darkness into light, they have
been called out of worldly ways into the communion of the Church, they are
being called out of former ways to live according to the new way of Jesus
Christ, a calling that is a continuous journey.
As it was for the Corinthians, so it was for us. A community, a parish, a diocese is never a
completed project. Yes we’ve been
sanctified, and made members of the Church, but Christians are called to continue
grow in holiness, to be open to the many ways which God’s spirit works to draw us
deeper and deeper into communion with God and one another.
And when we are faithful and open we can become the holy
ones God made us to be, for his glory and the salvation of souls.
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