| Happy the sinner |
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Looking at the parable of the Pharisee and the tax-collector, Fr Oliver Treanor is able to point our what are the central attitudes that will win us the kingdom of God.
In the kingdom that Jesus came to preach there is no room for saints. Only sinners. So if you are a saint already, don't read any further. However, if you are conscious of sin in your life, then 'Welcome home!' says the gospel, 'the doors are open to you'. You're in! Jesus himself was the very one who said it. 'I did not come to call the virtuous to repentance,' he announced, 'but sinners' (Luke 5:32). Repentance is the passport to God's kingdom because it is proof of conversion, which we saw last month is the starting-point of real holiness. Plain speaking Not like the Pharisees, this one in particular. He fasted twice a week, paid his dues, set the right example. 'But observed Jesus, 'he was praying to himself'. God wasn't listening. His gaze was fixed on the man at the back, head bowed, humble, confessing his sins. 'I tell you, finished Jesus, this man went back home again justified, at peace with God. The other did not'. Need of forgiveness The tax collector understood this. Which is why he was able to enter the Father's house with confidence, trespasses and all. He was not afraid to face the truth because the truth is that God loves sinners. Sign of love Simon the Pharisee, however, was not at all impressed. How dare this vile woman enter his house and make a fuss? If Jesus were as holy as people made him out to be, surely he would know who it was that touched him! Once again, a Pharisee and a sinner in God's presence. One sorrowful and sincere, the other proud and aloof! Simon was left speechless, the sadder person. He was incapable of real love. He did not know what it was to be in need of God. And his behaviour bore this out. He had failed to show even the commonest signs of affection for Jesus, the simplest courtesies of a host to a guest. His religion had no warmth in it, no humanity. It was as cold as his heart. Models of humility Take for instance the Virgin Mary who was conceived without sin and did nothing displeasing to God. In her great hymn of praise and thanks she rendered back to God the honour he had paid her by preserving her from fault.
St Therese of Lisieux, whose centenary we celebrated last year, said the same. God shows his greatest mercy, she wrote, in giving us the grace not to sin. In other words, no matter how blameless we may be, none of us can claim to have remained so without the Father's tender pity towards us. And that is why the Pharisee will always be a stranger in heaven. The self-righteous would simply not know how to find their way around paradise. The tax collector and the prostitute, Our Lady and St Thérèse, all are models of humility. They draw heaven towards themselves because they draw the Fatherliness of him who responds only to need. Unlocking the gates This article first appeared in The Messenger (February 1998), a publication of the Irish Jesuits.
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