Bishop SERAPHIM: Homily
Sunday of the Holy Forefathers of the Lord
Our Lives are not useless
17 December, 2006
Hebrews 11:9 – 10, 17 – 23, 32 – 40; Matthew 1:1 - 25

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

I suppose that many of you, by this time, will have seen the very old movie called It’s a Wonderful Life. You can find it at your favourite video store. It’s a good story, but it is not especially Christian (especially that bit about angels getting wings when bells ring). That’s really a bit too sentimental, and too far out. Nevertheless, this film has a good point.

If you don’t know the story: There is a man who is tempted to kill himself because suddenly his life is in a terrible condition. An angel comes to him, and shows him how different life would have been if he had not been born. He had been sort of wishing that he had not been born, and thinking that his life was a complete failure, and useless. He had gone into bankruptcy, etc. I won’t tell you the whole story. However, if he had not lived, all sorts of terrible things would have happened. He was very much a catalyst for good things in other people’s lives. When people are tempted by the devil in this particular way, that’s one of the things that they are blinded to: what life would be like without them. They forget, even though their lives are very painful, that the Lord is using them for good in many unexpected ways.

It’s important for us to remember that particular detail today when we remember the ancestors of the Lord. We hear the genealogy of the Lord today going back to the beginning, fourteen generations times three. All these people that are listed in the genealogy are people who prepared the way for the coming of Christ. They are all people whose lives said Yes to the Lord, preparing for the Mother of God herself to say her ultimate Yes. Her Yes in life was not just Yes to the Incarnation, but Yes to the Saviour in everything in her life. If any of those persons were not born, she would not have been prepared properly to become the Mother of God.

Now we are living after the fact, after the fact of the Incarnation. The same thing goes for us - for you, and me. Each of us the Lord creates uniquely. He loves us uniquely. As painful, difficult, and full of woe as sometimes our lives may be (sometimes to ourselves appearing useless) the less our lives are not useless. We go through all these difficulties in our lives with the eyes of our heart on the Saviour. It’s important for us that we go through all the difficulties with our eyes turned to the Saviour, with our confidence in Him.

I had a phone call early this morning when I was just waking up, from some place in the east, from a family who are relatively new immigrants to the country, and who have had considerable difficulty. They even came as English-speakers, so it isn’t as if they had all sorts of linguistic difficulties one way or the other. They came, and were facing the difficulties that immigrants face. They were a whole family, full of people who had no permission to work They had no money, and they were struggling and struggling. However, they were determined to keep their hearts on the Saviour, and to do what they had been taught to do - that is to trust Him, even though they just felt like giving up, and running away. As a result of their faithfulness, their taking prosphora every morning, and their taking holy water every morning as believers can do, the doors finally opened. They are finally getting their passports, and work permits. They just wanted to call me this morning, and give glory to God for the fact that this was finally happening. Despite all the difficulties they had in getting themselves settled in this country, the Lord has opened the doors for work to come. This family I knew in Europe quite a number of years ago. They have the potential to be very beneficial to our Church in this country. They have the gifts to be very good for our agriculture as well. I am looking forward to seeing what the Lord is going to do with this family.

The same thing goes for you, and me. We struggle. Yes, we do struggle, but the Lord is with us. However, without us, without our persevering, and our struggling, other people would be falling down, and getting lost. The Lord doesn’t always show you, and me who it is that is affected by our faithfulness, although sometimes we get a hint. But what is important is not what use I am in the world. In the end, we are so materialistic in North America. Everything is about what something is useful for. An ant is useful to a human being for what? A hippopotamus is useful to a human being for what? That’s always how we are assessing things. One person is useful to another human being for what? What a degradation of God’s creation!

Our value is not in our utilitarian merit. Our use is in who we are: the fact that we exist in the first place. That we affect other people for good is all great, but the important thing is that God created you, and me. He created us because He loves us. Who cares about the exact processes that doctors, and scientists now understand, and were taught in school. Human beings have been born, and been created like that for many thousands of years. What matters is that it is all about God’s love. It’s what is underneath it that is important.

It is all because God loves us. He loves you, and He loves me uniquely, and He loves us all together as His children. Our value rests in this love that produces us, and this love that sustains us. This love, and this communion between us, and Him: that is really what you, and I are all about. Yes, it’s good that there are very many unseen, unknown, positive effects from the struggle, and the life of each of us. In the end, it is still most important that God loves us. We love Him, and we are living in that love.

All of this is what this genealogy today is about. Let us respond to that demonstration of God’s love for us, that intimate care for us that is shown in this genealogy: the tender, unique, personal care He gives to each of us. Let us give thanks to the Lord for that. Living in the context of that, let us live our lives glorifying our Saviour, Jesus Christ, together with His Father, who is from everlasting, and His all-holy, good, and Life-creating Spirit, now, and ever, and unto the ages of ages. Amen.