This reflection is based on the readings for the Twenty-sixth Sunday of Year A: Ezekiel 18: 25-28; Psalm 25; Philippians 2: 1-11; and Matthew 21: 28-32.
A question that has often been asked by preachers when today’s Gospel is proclaimed is a very simple one that goes like this: “If you were accused of being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?”
This simple question gets right to the heart of today’s Gospel. Many people claim that they are Christian and that they are followers of Christ. Unfortunately, there are few signs in our world, which is filled with many who claim to be Christian, of actual Christians walking around and daring to act.
Perhaps one of the reasons why it is difficult to find many concrete signs of our faith in the world is due to the fact that so many people have confused being Christian with a kind of political correctness which identifies being Christian with being “nice.” This religion of being “nice” often silences many and keeps them from speaking and acting for fear of offending another. When conversations around the workplace might call for a Christian to speak up for Gospel values, instead of being a witness to the Gospel, he or she might decide to remain silent and desire not to offend anyone.
This same attitude that Christianity is about being nice results in many who think they are Christian, not even knowing what Christianity stands for or believes about God. This has always surprised me when I visit our Catholic schools to say Mass. Whenever I ask what they think it means to be Catholic, the answer is usually “to be nice.” It might surprise many to know that the word “nice” does not occur at all in the Gospels or Catechism of the Catholic Church.
The most basic expression of what it means to be a Christian is what we find in the great Creeds of the Church- that of the Apostles Creed and the Nicene Creed. In both of these Creeds, what is stated very concisely is that we believe God the Father created the world and everything out of nothing and gave us the gift of life. It goes on to state that this same loving God sent His only Son Jesus Christ into the world as a human being born of the Virgin Mary to save us from our sins. Jesus loved us so much, that He died for our sins. After He had died, the Father rose Him up and He ascended into Heaven, and by doing this, opened for us the gates of eternal life. The Creed goes on to profess that God did not want us to wait until we got to Heaven to live in relationship with Him, and so the Holy Spirit was sent into the world in order that you and I might live in Communion with God today through the Church that He established. This Church is said to be One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic. The nature of the Church is such that it is open to all people and each individual has a responsibility to belong to it and live in communion with God today through that Church. The fact that the Nicene Creed states that there will be a judgement of the living and the dead implies that the way in which each of us responds to these mysteries of our faith does have some impact on how we will share in the life of the world to come and the resurrection of the dead, which we profess in our Creeds.
What I thought I might like to do for today’s reflection, at least for the sake of providing myself with a few ways of thinking about how I might get convicted for being a Christian, is to think about some concrete ways that I could provide evidence in my own life that might provide evidence to help someone convict me of being a Christian. To do that, I thought it might be interesting to go through the Creed and think of some concrete ways of acting to provide evidence of the Christian faith.
Here are some brief examples of how one might be convicted of being a Christian:
There are multiple other ways in which a person might give evidence of being a Christian. These are just a few examples of some of the things that a prosecutor might look for while attempting to construct a case for the faith.
Because I am such a weak and fragile human being, I will conclude by asking you a huge favour: Please pray that if I am ever arrested and accused of being a Christian, there might be some evidence to convict me. If its okay with you, I will make the same prayer for you.
May God bless all of us with the conviction to be His faithful and sincere disciples.
Fr. Michael McGourty is Pastor of St. Peter’s Church in downtown Toronto.