Saint Margaret of Scotland (Optional Memorial)
Whoever seeks to preserve his life will lose it, but whoever loses it will save it. (Luke 17:33)
If you think this Scripture verse sounds familiar, theres good reason. Jesus says the same thing at least once in every Gospel! But even though its familiar, Jesus statement is the type of paradox that can be hard to make sense of. What does it mean for me?
To see one way it was lived out in real life, lets look at someone who practiced losing his life and ended up saving it.
Francis Xavier was an ambitious young man who sought success in the scholarly world. Living in Paris, he had many opportunities to take advantage of all that the world had to offer. But an older student named Ignatius of Loyola saw something special in Francis—something that could be fulfilled only as he let go of the life of scholarly success that he valued so highly. And so Ignatius befriended him and challenged him—patiently but repeatedly—to put God above his worldly ambitions: to lose his life instead of seeking to preserve it.
Slowly, Francis found his priorities changing. Earthly accomplishments no longer seemed so fulfilling. The idea of doing great things for God started to entice him. After following the Spiritual Exercises with Ignatius, he decided to let go of his earthly ambitions, lose his life in this world, and devote himself to God.
The rest, as they say, is history. Francis Xavier spent the rest of his life bringing the good news of Jesus Christ to the distant lands of Asia. He is credited with the conversions of countless people, and its said that he baptized more than one hundred thousand people before he died at the age of forty-six.
Your experience of losing your life to save it probably wont look as dramatic as St. Francis Xaviers. But inwardly, it is every bit as life changing. Every time you put aside your own preference or put someone else first, you are saving your life. Each choice to hold your own plans loosely and ask for Gods guidance is a choice to let go of preserving your own way. Little by little, these choices reshape your heart and your will. Step-by-step, your desires start to change. Before you know it, youll be doing great things for God!
Lord, help me to let go of anything that would keep me from following you.
2 John 4-9
Psalm 119:1-2, 10-11, 17-18
Saint Cyril of Jerusalem (313-350)
Bishop of Jerusalem, Doctor of the Church
Catechetical lectures 15, 1 ; PG 33, 870-871
The two comings of Christ
We do not preach only one advent of Christ, but a second also, far more glorious than the first. For the first gave us a glimpse of his patience; but the second brings with it the crown of a divine kingdom In his former advent he was wrapped in swaddling clothes in the manger; in his second, he covers himself with light as with a garment (Ps 103:2). In his first coming, he endured the cross, despising shame (Heb 12:2); in his second, he comes attended by a host of angels, receiving glory.
Now, then, we do not just rest only on his first advent, but look forward to his second also when, meeting our Master with the angels, we may worship him and say: Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord (Mt 21:9). The Savior will come, not to be judged again but to judge those who judged him
He came the first time because of a divine dispensation, teaching people with persuasion; but on that day they will of necessity have him for their King.