Jesus said to his disciples: “Remember the wife of Lot. Whoever seeks to preserve his life will lose it, but whoever loses it will save it.”
In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus tells his disciples the story of Noah, how during his time people were going about their customary ways of eating, drinking, and marrying when the floods came and destroyed them all. “Similarly,” Jesus says, in the days of Lot, “they were eating, drinking, buying, selling, planting, building; on the day when Lot left Sodom, fire and brimstone rained from the sky to destroy them all. So it will be on the day the Son of Man is revealed.” Although the angels told Lot and his wife not to look back, Lot’s wife did look back and turned into a pillar of salt. “Remember the wife of Lot,” Jesus says. How clearly does the meaning of this ring out in the words of Jesus? “Whoever seeks to preserve his life will lose it, but whoever loses it will save it”? Do I move forward in my faith, or do I look back on the desolate ruins of my past?
God, help me understand today’s Scripture readings. What do I gain by trying to grasp what instead I should let go of? My hope is to let go of what I should lose so that I can gain what endures by striving to hear and do God’s will. As Saint John says in the first reading: “Look to yourselves that you do not lose what we worked for but may receive a full recompense. Anyone who is so ‘progressive’ as not to remain in the teaching of the Christ does not have God; whoever remains in the teaching has the Father and the Son.” Today, we remember Saint Martin of Tours, a fourth-century priest and bishop, who was known for saying near the time of his death: “Lord, if your people still need me, I do not refuse the work. Your will be done.”
Today, God, let your spirit work in me. I am eager to face the strife of the day when I can put to the test the words of Jesus: “Whoever seeks to preserve his life will lose it, but whoever loses it will save it.” Through your grace may I have the courage when my faith is tested to lose my life for the sake of gaining Christ. Thank you, God, for your great goodness!
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.
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