Do not think that I have come to bring peace upon the earth.
I have come to bring not peace but the sword.
He came to bring the word of God, the sword of the Spirit that is sharper than any two-edged sword. It pierces the division of "soul and spirit, joints and of marrow" (see Hebrews 4:12). We should therefore not imagine that it will spare our personal lives. The pruning that helps those who are on vine to remain there and bear fruit has an internal impact, to be sure. But it has an external one as well, insofar as it is necessary for us to prefer to remain on the vine even if other branches are pruned. We must not jump ship for the kindling pile just because we prefer the company we might have there.
We could imagine being asked to tone down our expression of our faith in order to appease non-believing family members. But this we must not do. We must not prefer even our most beloved family and friends to Jesus himself. If we do, we are succumbing to the illusion that we can love them better than God himself. But where do we imagine our future with our family is heading if not toward God? Is there anything we can choose apart from him, except that which amounts only to temporary distractions from our mortality? Even when we make choices that seem to be choosing God over and above our family we are actually also choosing our family as well, to love them with a divine love from a supernatural perspective, rather than with an earthly and merely human love.
Whoever finds his life will lose it,
and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.“Whoever receives you receives me,
and whoever receives me receives the one who sent me.
We tend to be preoccupied with the search for things we cannot keep. Even if we find life in this way there is no way to hold it indefinitely. It will eventually slip through our fingers like water. This is hard for us to internalize since we are much more aware of the visible and tangible goods of temporary existence than we are of other things that seem more distant and abstract. It's not that we don't value things like truth, goodness, and beauty. Rather, their ephemeral status means that we are too willing to choose lower things instead, at least on what we imagine to be a temporary basis, since they seem more concrete and urgent. But precisely in virtue of being concrete those lower things are subject to corruption and disintegration to a much greater degree than higher things, with God alone abiding forever. The whole hierarchy of being is meant to be an arrow pointing us to God. But when this apparent abstraction impinges on our daily lives it has real consequences. We may in fact have to lose our lives for Jesus in order to truly find them. We must at least have to be sufficiently detached from them that we can lose them for his sake if it is asked of us.
And whoever gives only a cup of cold water
to one of these little ones to drink
because he is a disciple–
amen, I say to you, he will surely not lose his reward.
It may seem that we are being asked to achieve a level of heroic virtue that is, if not actually impossible, at least hugely impractical, and therefore impossible practically speaking. But how does Jesus actually call us as disciples to live this preference for God and for higher things? Is it by our own great accomplishments? Not primarily. Rather it is doing little things, but for his sake. It is not by turning away from unspiritual brothers and sisters that we become pleasing to God. Instead, we are asked to show hospitality, but specifically for God's sake. This is what it means to love a prophet or a righteous man because they are a prophet or a righteous man, more than for, say, their whit or their charm.
The call of Jesus does not typically require gigantic gestures of piety, but rather small acts of faithfulness. To give someone a cup of cold water is probably an action that is well within our reach. But it gains its true value when we do it specifically because someone is a disciple. Or if they are not a disciple yet, because they, like everyone are at least potential disciples. And thus we become agents of God's plan, "which he set forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in Christ, things in heaven and things on earth in him" (see Ephesians 1:9-10). Do we see that it is God's love, expressed through his disciples, that helps to bring about this unity? The cutting action of the sword of the Spirit is important. But it is meant to yield one day to a more true and lasting wholeness.

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