“Everyone
who acknowledges me before others, I will acknowledge
before my heavenly Father. But whoever denies me before
others I will deny before my heavenly Father.”
(Mt 10:32–33)
This
word of life is a source of great joy and encouragement
to all Christians.
With
this passage, Jesus calls us to be consistent in living
out our faith in him, because our eternal destiny
depends on the attitude we have assumed toward him
during our lifetime. If we declare ourselves for him
before others, he says, he will have reason to declare
himself for us before his Father. If instead we will
disown him before others, he will disown us before
his Father.
“Everyone
who acknowledges me before others I will acknowledge
before my heavenly Father. But whoever denies me before
others, I will deny before my heavenly Father.”
Jesus
reminds us of the reward or the punishment that awaits
us after this life because he loves us. He knows,
as one Father of the Church put it, that at times
fear of punishment is more effective than a beautiful
promise. For this reason he increases in us the hope
of endless happiness while at the same time, in order
to save us, he awakens in us a fear of being condemned.
His
aim is that we may live forever with God. This is
all that matters. It is the goal for which we have
been called into existence. Only with him, in fact,
will we reach our complete self-fulfilment, the full
realization of all our aspirations. This is why Jesus
urges us to “acknowledge” him here and
now. If instead we choose not to have anything to
do with Jesus, if we disown him now, upon reaching
the next life we will find ourselves cut off from
him forever.
At
the end of our lives, Jesus will therefore simply
confirm before the Father the choice that each one
of us made while here on earth – with all its
consequences. By referring to the final judgment,
he emphasizes the tremendous importance and seriousness
of the decision we make here. Our eternity is at stake.
“Everyone
who acknowledges me before others I will acknowledge
before my heavenly Father. But whoever denies me before
others, I will deny before my heavenly Father.”
How
can we best take advantage of this warning Jesus has
given us? How can we live his Word? He himself said
it: “Everyone who acknowledges me...”
Let
us decide to declare ourselves for him before others
with simplicity and openness, overcoming our need
for mere human respect. Let’s renounce a state
of mediocrity and compromise that empties our lives,
especially as Christians.
We
have been called to bear witness to Christ: through
us he wants to reach all people with his message of
peace, justice and love.
We
can give witness to him wherever we are, whether in
our family, at work, among friends, at school or in
the many different circumstances of our lives. We
can do it first of all through our behavior, and the
integrity of our lives, through our purity, our detachment
from money, and our participation in the joys and
sufferings of others.
We
can express it through our mutual love, our unity,
so that the peace and joy promised by Jesus to those
united to him will fill our souls even now and overflow
onto others.
Perhaps
someone will ask us why we act the way we do, why
we are so calm in a world fraught with tension. We
will then answer with humility and sincerity, using
those words that the Holy Spirit will suggest to us.
In this way we can bear witness to Christ with our
words, too, and through our ideas.
Then
perhaps many of those who are searching for him will
find him.
At
other times we may be misunderstood, contradicted,
made the object of derision, hatred and persecution.
Jesus
warned us about this possibility: “If they persecuted
me, they will also persecute you” (Jn. 15:20).
We
are still on the right path, however, so let’s
go ahead in bearing witness to him courageously even
in the midst of trials, even at the cost of our lives.
The reward that awaits us is well worth it; it is
heaven, where Jesus whom we love will declare himself
for us in front of his Father for all eternity.