‘Amen, I say to you, whatever you did
for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me.’
Jesus is truly present in his people. In particular, by becoming poor and surrendering himself into the abusive hands of cruel authority, he associated himself with the poor, the abused, and the neglected throughout history. He took on himself the most challenging aspects of our fallen humanity, aspects that are hard to look upon directly, "as one from whom men hide their faces" (see Isaiah 53:3). It is perhaps easier to love the crucified Christ now that the traumatic nature of those events is in the past. But it is harder to love his presence in his people when it takes such challenging forms. Indeed, most of us manage it, if at all, by staying at a safe distance, empowering a special caste of volunteers and organizations with resources to do it on our behalf. Then we can do our part without facing the gritty reality. And perhaps this is OK much of the time. We are not called to address ourselves to every instance of poverty, illness, of imprisonment, since we are finite creatures with limited resources. But we must not turn our gaze from needs only we can meet. In a way analogous to how we should not ignore the Eucharistic presence of Jesus displayed to us on a monstrance or hidden in the tabernacle, neither should we forget his presence in other people, especially in the lowest and the least of his brethren. We did not have the opportunity to love Jesus while he embraced the fullness of earthly poverty in his passion. In any event, most of us would have fled the scene as did his disciples. But now we can at least signal that love for him by the way respond to these least brothers of his who cross our paths.
He will answer them, ‘Amen, I say to you,
what you did not do for one of these least ones,
you did not do for me.’
We will one day be answerable for the good we could have done but failed to do, and for the love we failed to show. We won't be able to suggest that we truly knew and loved our Lord Jesus if we neglected him in his distressing disguise of poverty, sickness, and imprisonment. It is not credible that we loved the reality but despised the image. We can't sit by while such ones are trampled under foot and yet plead that we loved every fallen fragment of the Eucharistic host. His presence in the Eucharist is indeed a more maximal level of presence. But it is a presence that is meant to lead us to discover more and more his other forms of presence, especially in our brothers and sisters.
And these will go off to eternal punishment,
but the righteous to eternal life.
It is not that we earn eternal life by our righteous deeds. Eternal life is fundamentally a gift. The ability to consistently perform righteous deeds is only possibly by grace. We have light because of the light of Christ that shines within us. Yet we can signal by how we live that we do not truly desire eternal life, can reject Jesus by the way we respond to his presence in others. Every opportunity to help others should thus be seen as an opportunity for us to show our love to Jesus himself, and to demonstrate with our actions, not only our thoughts and words, that we desire to be with him forever.
Vineyard Worship UK And Ireland - Refiner's Fire






