If you are wondering what thread binds all these readings together,
I will tell you what I see. That thread is grace.
What is grace? Here’s a short answer:
Grace is God’s love and life, acting in our lives, to make us like God.
First God nudges and prompts us, and even blocks our way,
all to steer us away from spiritual danger and toward life.
Those helps, nudges, prompts – which can come in our conscience,
or from our guardian angel, or from other people –
comprise what we call “actual grace.”
What we also call grace is that infusion of God’s own life into our lives.
That is “sanctifying grace,” because it makes us holy.
This grace forgives us and changes us to become heavenly.
To become like God. To be united to God!
Jesus gave us the sacraments as certain sources of sanctifying grace.
He chose and transformed the Apostles to bring the sacraments,
to give us visible, tangible assurance of his grace.
Here’s an analogy.
A friend looks at you says, “You don’t look well.
You need to go to the doctor.”
So, you go to the doctor, she says “Yes, you are very sick”;
but she gives you medicine, and you get better.
The friend’s nudge was actual grace;
what the doctor gives – to heal you – is sanctifying grace.
Although sorting grace in this way is helpful,
ultimately grace boils down to one reality:
God, who is mercy and life; who is holy, who is love.
As you and I encounter God, either we are drawn in,
and transformed, into God – this we call purgatory and heaven –
Or else we resist and reject his life.
It is sobering to realize, that if we isolate ourselves from God,
the word for that self-chosen isolation? Is hell.
Notice what God told the people in the first reading:
I carried you. And what Paul said: that we were “helpless.”
And what Jesus said: what you receive, you received “without cost.”
So here are two key points I urge you to reflect on deeply.
First: Grace – God’s love, God’s mercy – is all a GIFT.
No one earns heaven; no one pays for his or her sins.
It is not necessary; it is not possible.
The only response that is possible is to accept God’s love,
and be transformed into love! Or else, to refuse it.
The idea that you or I could offer any “payment”
is equal parts offensive and laughable.
Second point: God’s grace always is ahead of you.
You may think it was your idea to turn back to God, to put things right;
but in fact, it was God’s idea first.
His grace nudges you; supports you, draws you,
assists you all the way to the destination, which is Himself.
The only thing you and I can contribute is “yes.”
Once given, that “yes” becomes something astonishing.
Think of our Blessed Mother: what came from her simple “yes.”
This is the mystery of it all:
Even the breath to speak that yes is itself God’s grace!
But it is still ours, enabled by him to be freely given.
If it sounds like I’m saying that it is all God, and none of ourselves,
I am not quite saying that. This is the jaw-dropper:
A finite creature – us –
is drawn up into the Infinite Love of God.
We are both overwhelmed, and by that overwhelming,
at last we become truly human.
The one right and necessary response is openness and gratitude.
Because of our own narrowness, these are lifetime tasks.
This is the rationale to prayer, penance, acts of self-denial,
Mass each Sunday, and regular confession.
It’s not about paying God or impressing him – good luck!
No! These are time-tested tools to help us cooperate with God.
When I was a boy, my parents provided everything for me.
But like all the rest of us, at times my father and mother said,
Get off the couch, come help.
My “help” wasn’t that much help; sometimes it was a distraction.
But my folks knew that my response and participation
was going to help me become less selfish, more generous – more human.
Has it occurred to you what is happening right now?
By God’s grace you are here. Right now he is giving you life.
Receive it without cost—so that you may share it without cost.
Like the Apostles, you and I are sent.
Not as experts with all the answers,
but as people so full of wonder that others cannot help but ask:
“What happened to you?”