Once again, I was thinking about the differences and
similarities between our present day culture and the
culture of the Roman empire 2000 years ago. I saw a
little video yesterday about food preparation for large
numbers of people and it mentioned that sometimes
emperors gave out free bread to the people who came to
the Coliseum so they could have something to eat while
they watched the gladiators fight, or the criminals or
prisoners of war being killed, or the Christians being
thrown to the lions. It seems, to us, almost
unbelievable that not only would people sit there to
watch those blood baths, but that they could eat while
they were doing it. This is the type of world the
Corinthians of St. Paul's time were living in.
Many of you have heard of, or else watched the video of
the Planned Parenthood Director of Medical Services
discuss some of the business of this evil organization
while being secretly filmed. She talks about the
harvesting of organs of the unborn for sale to those who
need fetal tissue for research purposes. She discusses
the best ways to dispatch the unborn so that the
greatest number of organs will be preserved for sale.
And she carries on with this gruesome topic while eating
a salad and a large glass of wine in a fine restaurant.
True, Caesar has not provided her meal, but I'm sure
he's giving her a tax write-off for a business meal if
she pays the check.
So there are some similarities here in being able to eat
while either watching or discussing the dismemberment
and death of human beings. But there are some
differences as between us and the world of the
Corinthians of St. Paul. For them, they grew up in a
world where such violence was the everyday accepted form
of entertainment. They grew up in a world where people
could be considered the property of others in
slavery—and that masters had the right of life and death
over those souls whom they owned. No one thought that
people had God-given rights or that human life was
sacred, and everyone knew the state had the authority to
take those lives, any life, if it chose to do so. No
court decree could over-rule the authority of the state
either on the local level or on the level of the
empire's wishes. St. Paul's Christians were no doubt
attracted to the Faith not because it provided them with
greater economic or political power. We hear St. Paul in
fact claim the opposite. He was despised, lowly, hungry,
poorly clothed, roughly treated, a homeless wanderer who
worked hard to provide for himself. People did not
become Christian because they intended to end up like
that! No, they found faith because of the love of
Christ, and then their love for Him. They found faith in
knowing their sins could be forgiven, that eternal life
was a reality, that love was the greatest force in the
universe, not power or money. They found faith in
learning that, as children of God the Father adopted in
baptism, they possessed the dignity of sons and
daughters of the living God, whether they were slaves or
free in this present life. They very much understood the
values and style of life they were giving up to become
followers of Christ. They became, in a sense, strangers
and aliens to the culture they lived in, even though
they understood that culture very, very well. They now
belonged to another King, they now belonged to another
Kingdom.
Our situation today is rather different. We, ourselves,
grew up in a society that considered itself to be
largely Christian, although the younger we are the less
true that is. We grew up in a society that began some
decades ago to chuck out, piece by piece, sections of
Christian thought and beliefs that were held by almost
all Christian people, Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox,
beliefs that were universal among the followers of
Christ. We began to throw those principles out, one by
one, not because Caesar forced us to do so, but we
actually forced Caesar to allow them, to give us the
freedom to go against the teachings of 2,000 years and
embrace a new code of morality. It may not have been a
majority decision on the part of the people once each
moral teaching was cast aside, but all too many others,
even if they did not agree, sat silently by and allowed
it to happen. Perhaps it was thought to be too difficult
to oppose the changes in law, or too much trouble as we
went about looking for more comfortable lives, or too
uncaring in not allowing other people to have what they
claimed were just and humane and even loving actions and
values. And it was all about freedom and rights. Of
course, we don't allow slavery, but we're told that life
in the womb is the property of the person who carries
the womb. Very, very Roman that idea. And so is the idea
that even outside the womb that life can still be
extinguished, as happens quietly here and in Europe
every day. The big difference between us and the people
of the Empire is that now these life and death decisions
are not legally the right of the father, but they now
fall into the hands of the child's own mother. And this
is the sign of how far we have come from the brutality
and patriarchal injustice of former times and places?
Fifty-six million! Since Roe v. Wade. Hard to imagine
that number. We can only stomach it by trying to ignore
it. And, as a people, that's what we have done. We don't
like it, most of us U. S. citizens, but we'll just
ignore it. And, as so easily happens, once one area of
immoral behavior is ignored, because we're told we can't
interfere with the so-called right of other people, once
it is ignored, it is often eventually embraced by those
who looked the other way. Having relations outside of
marriage was universally seen as immoral. How many
people in our society still hold to that today?
We have seen the Christian values that supported our
nation struck down, one by one, as we have just
experienced again a few weeks ago. Since we have been
convinced that Christian ethics have no place in public
life, and since we have often preferred the indulgent
looseness of modern culture to rule over us in place of
the truth of Christ, it is hard not to see how even more
breaches of Christian moral living will be coming our
way to further tear down the sanctity of the family and
the God-given gift of human life. Devil ain't lazy,
works 24 hours a day! Unlike the Corinthian Christians,
we have the power to turn all this around, but, as
Christian Americans, we are afraid to use it lest we be
called hateful people; we are afraid to use it because
we do not fully embrace Christ the way we ought to.
But we, those of us here and many, many others, we can
do something that the early Christians did. We can love
Christ. We can love one another. We can love our
neighbor as ourselves, even if our neighbor be poor,
confused, sinful, weak, hateful, wealthy, Protestant,
Muslim, or Wiccan. We can keep ourselves on the path of
Christ by serving the Divine Liturgy, through Confession
and Holy Communion, by our personal prayers. We can
firmly believe in the judgment of Christ and His great
mercy, and in life everlasting because this is not our
home. We can strive to help rebuild a just and moral
society, but all the while remembering our hope cannot
be in Caesar, or government, or judges, and certainly
not in wealth or power of our own making, but only in
Jesus Christ.
I do not believe we can promise our children to have a
better life than we do, simply because they are born in
America, as the Christian slaves in Corinth could not
promise their children that kind of better life either.
But like those poor Christians back then we can promise
our children a better life because they are reborn in
Christ, and no one can take that divine life away from
them and if they live in it they will have a better
life. No one can offer them greater dignity, value or
hope than in Christ. No one else has a better life to
offer than our Lord, and it is that same life, St. Paul
urges us, to share with one another and to offer to
those standing in need of it in our world today.
Let us pray for one another. And let us pray for those
who are seeking truth and a love that does not fail.