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| St. Dismas receives the grace of final perseverance |
26th
Sunday in Ordinary Time, Ezekiel 18:25-28
If
he turns from the wickedness he has committed, and does what is right and just,
he shall preserve his life.
Both the first reading from the
prophet Ezekiel and the parable which our Savior offers in Matthew 21:28-32
(the parable of the two sons, the one who would not work but converted and the
other who said he would work but did not) hint toward the reality that what is
most important of all is the manner in which we finish. Certainly, the
beginning and the middle are important, but the end or the finish makes all the
difference.
In a stage of the Tour de
France, it is possible for a rider or (more likely) a small group of riders to
lead the day for over a hundred miles (this is called a break-away from the pelaton); however, it almost always
happens that the main pack of riders (i.e. the pelaton) will catch this small break-away with less than a mile to
go before the finish. Having led the stage for all those miles, the break-away
group will lose all hope of victory in just the last minutes of the several
hour long day of racing. What is most important is how one finishes.
So it is with the life of
grace. Certainly, it is important to start well and to live in Christ’s grace
throughout life, but what is most important of all is to die well, to finish
well, to complete one’s life with the grace of final perseverance. This alone
will bring us to heaven: We simply must die in the state of grace.
However, the Church teaches
that we cannot merit this grace, not even by a holy life. How then do we gain
perseverance and eternal salvation?