In
today’s Gospel, Jesus says,
“But, I tell you, if you do not repent, you will all
perish as they did!” It’s a striking warning, followed by a
story that says he same again, only in different words. “For
three years now I have come in search of fruit on this fig tree but
have found none. So cut it down.”
Repent
or perish. Bear fruit or be cut down. These words of warning might
appear to be harsh. But they are words of mercy precisely because
they are a warning.
If
a parent warns their child not to run in the street, the parent is
not condemning the child to be hit by a car. On the contrary, parents
try to keep them safe. The warning itself is an act of love and
concern.
Here,
in the case of souls, Jesus’s words are an act of mercy. Repent, he
urges, while you still can. Bear fruit before your life becomes a
barren wasteland. Change, because I love you; it’s not too late. We
still have life within us, and God loves us enough to exhort us to
exercise our freedom in favor of what is true, and good, and
beautiful.
Jesus
in the Gospel most especially is asking us to repent of our sins. To
turn away from them, Catholics means to Confess them in Confession,
where we receive God’s mercy.
He
gives a strong warning, saying that those who do not repent, will
perish. What does perish mean? It means to die in the state of mortal
sin and to go to hell forever.
It
is very loving to warn us of dangers to our soul. This is why priests
act as shepherds to warn the sheep of the danger of not praying, not
practicing one’s faith, not confessing one’s sins, by failing to
love one’s neighbor.
In
the past I told you the definition of mercy. Mercy is to open one’s
heart to relieve the misery of another by doing an act of charity.
When
we practice mercy, we are producing fruit.
On
the Cross, the Heart of Jesus was opened when it was pierced with a
sword, causing blood and water to gush forth. Jesus saw the misery of
our souls and by an act of forgiveness, relieved that misery.
When
we look at a Divine Mercy picture, we see rays of red and white
coming forth from the Heart of Jesus to relieve the misery of our
sins. St. Faustina’s prayer reminds us of the cost of mercy.
“O
Blood and Water, which gushed
forth from the Heart of Jesus as a fountain of Mercy for
us, I trust in You!”
All
we have to do-- to be merciful-- is to look for
the misery of others and
then do our best relieve that misery with an act of love.
The
corporal works of mercy are
feeding the hungry, giving drink to the thirsty, burying the dead,
visiting the sick and imprisoned, clothing those who are
naked,
sheltering
the homeless. The spiritual works of mercy are: counseling the
doubtful, instructing the ignorant, bearing wrongs patiently, praying
for the living and the dead, admonishing the sinner, forgive all
offenses, comfort the sorrowful.
If
we look for the misery of another person, and relieve that misery
with an act of love we are practicing mercy.
For
example, if a child needs help with their homework, the child is in
misery and to relieve that misery by instructing the child, is an act
of mercy.
Another
example a young person has the misery of being afraid, and when tell
them, “Have
courage, don’t be afraid.”
we are relieving their misery by an act of mercy.
If
someone is making negative comments about someone else, that
gossipers in misery, we can admonish them by saying something
positive about the person, they are speaking negatively about.
If
someone’s pet dies, and they are sorrowing, we can comfort them, by
saying, Jesus loves you.
At
a basketball game, I
recently saw a teenage boy ask for
money
from his father, to
purchase
a bottle of water and the boy came back, not only with
a
bottle of water for himself, but
one to his father, who was thirsty. The father saw the misery of his
son who
was thirsty and he relieved that misery by giving him money to buy
water. And
the boy saw the misery of his father and brought him water to drink.
If
we are accused of something we didn’t do, and we can’t prove that
it wasn’t us, we can offer up the misunderstanding and bear it
patiently.
When
someone is in the hospital, or nursing home, or
if they are home bound,
they are in misery because they feel alone, but if someone
visits
them, they are doing an act of mercy by talking to them and helping
them to feel loved.
When
parents go to Confession and bring their children with them, they are
relieving the misery of the child’s soul, by allowing Jesus to
forgive them.
When
parents bring their children to Mass, they are seeing the misery of a
child who needs to be with Jesus and they are relieving that misery
by helping the child to pray to Jesus in the Sacred Host.
Parents
when you bring your children to Adoration, you are being merciful to
them by helping them to learn to pray.
Do
you see how many different ways we can practice mercy? All we have to
do is be attentive to the misery of others and relieve that misery
with an act of love, that is mercy.
As
we go through Lent, try to look for misery of others and to relieve
that misery, by an act of love, and it is then we will see Jesus in
disguise of those whom we help.
Jesus
indicates what we will be judged on at the end of our life, which is
mercy. As
Our Lord said, “When
I was hungry, you gave me food. When I was thirsty, you gave me
drink, when I was ill and in prison, you visited to me. What you did
to the least of my brothers and sisters, you do unto me.”
In
Matthew’s Gospel Jesus explains what happens to those who fail to
give
mercy.
Basically,
we could become that fig tree, that produced no fruit, and will be
cut down, because we failed to love
our neighbor.
Just
as Our Lord gave the tree three years to produce fruit or it will be
cut down, so Jesus first calls us to repentance, then He asks that we
produce fruit by being merciful to others.
But,
if we fail to repent, if we fail to be merciful to others and not
truly love them, we could be cut off from eternal life at the end of
our time on earth.
As
Our Lord said, “Then
shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye
cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels:
for when I
was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me no
drink, I was ill and in prison and you did not visit me.”
But
if we do acts of mercy, which are really acts of love, at the end of
our live, we will hear Jesus say to us,
“Then
shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of
my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world.” for
“what
you did to the least of my brothers and sisters, you did unto Me...”