Solemnity of All Saints 2021
Some of you may have been fans of the characters of the Peanuts comic strip created by Charles M. Schultz. Without a doubt, we have grown up enjoying, laughing with, sympathising and even hating the various individual comic personalities. My most endearing character is definitely Charlie Brown, the main male protagonist. The reason for this attraction is because Charlie Brown reminds me so much of myself growing up and even now, as an adult.
Personality-wise, he is gentle, insecure,
and lovable. Charlie Brown possesses significant determination and hope, but
frequently fails because of his insecurities, outside interferences, or plain
bad luck. Although liked by his friends, he is often the subject of bullying,
especially at the hands of Lucy van Pelt. Charlie is the proverbial Born Loser.
He is described by his creator as “the one who suffers because he’s a
caricature of the average person. Most of us are much more acquainted with
losing than winning. Winning is great, but it isn’t funny.” We may laugh at
Charlie’s bumbling expense, but as far as Charlie is concerned, losing isn’t
funny either.
To be a Christian today often feels like
being a loser. This is true, both as a matter of demographics and regarding the
influence and respectability of traditional Christian values. There are fewer
Christians even in traditionally predominantly “Christian” countries, and our
neighbours think less of us because of our strange values and ideas. We are
increasingly outsiders. And how we respond to this reality may be the defining
question of our time.
The good news is that Christianity has
always been a religion of losers. We have been persecuted, our beliefs have
been ridiculed and rejected, our values have been maligned, sometimes driving
us underground to practice our faith secretly. But though we may appear to be
weak, powerless, failures, and losers in the eyes of the world, in the eyes of
God we are victorious and winners! In this world we will have trouble; in this world
we will lose; but take heart, Christ has overcome the world. And this is what
the Saints in heaven declare in song and praise: “Victory to our God who sits
on the throne, and to the Lamb.” These were the same figures who appeared to be
defeated by anti-Christian forces, persecuted, tortured and martyred and yet,
emerged victorious holding palms as trophies of their victory.
Nowhere is this truth more evident than in
the Beatitudes. One could paraphrase the list of beatitudes as this: “Happy or
Blessed are the losers!” This is what the paradoxical and counterintuitive
values behind the Beatitudes seek to display. Our Lord and Saviour, just as the
beatitudes would describe, had to experience poverty, pain, suffering, loss,
persecution and death for the sake of righteousness in order to gain the
victory and joyful blessedness of the resurrection and the gift of eternal life
for all of us. This is the core of the Christian message - death before
resurrection, loss before victory, last before first, poverty before riches.
For in the Christian story, ‘success and failure’ is inverted.
Although we often describe the Saints in
heaven as the Church Triumphant, those who have “run the race” and are crowned
with glory in Heaven, it often doesn’t feel this way here on earth. Our earthly
experiences of failure and loss make us doubt the promises of the beatitudes.
But if we take a deeper look at the
promises which are proclaimed by the beatitudes, we begin to recognise the
veracity of their claims even in this life without waiting for the next. The
losers can discover something about themselves that winners cannot ever
appreciate – that they are loved and wanted simply because of who they are, and
not because of what they achieve. That despite it all, raw humanity is glorious
and wonderful, entirely worthy of love. This is revealed precisely at the
greatest point of dejection – our Lord’s death and resurrection. The
resurrection is not just a magic trick at raising a dead body to life. That’s a
neat and impressive trick. But it is so much more than that. It is a revelation
that love is stronger than death, grace is stronger than sin, that human worth
is not indexed to worldly success, but to one’s fidelity to the path laid out
by Christ. The lives of the Saints are testimony to this. On this side of
heaven, they may appear to be losers. But as the vision of St John in the first
reading lifts the veil, we are given a glimpse of their true worth - they are
winners and victors in the Kingdom of Heaven.
A successful Christian, if you can call
him or her one, called to be a saint, ought to be hated rather than feted in
this world. Yes, it does seem that the modernist forces seem to be attacking
the Church from every angle, that orthodox Christian beliefs and values are aggressively
under assault, yet this feast reminds us that we are not alone in our
experience and that this epoch in history, is not that unique as the Church has
always suffered derision, rejection, humiliation and condemnation from her
inception. We often forget that until our Lord returns in glory as He brings
judgment upon the earth, battles and wars will remain. So, no matter how
peaceful we wish our lives could be, the truth is our lives, this side of
heaven, will be tainted with conflict.
But despite the onslaught she experiences,
not only from earthly enemies but also demonic forces, the vision described in
the Book of the Apocalypse will be the final outcome. There, before the throne
of the Lamb, we will know that we are conquerors, not losers and that failure
will be redeemed by the victory won for us by the Lamb which was slain.
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