“God
will dwell with them; they will be his people”
(cf. Rev. 21:3)
“See,
the home of God is among mortals.He will dwell with
them; they will be his people,and God himself will
be with them” (Rev 21:3).
This
month’s Word of Life is an exhortation: if we
want to be part of his people, we must allow him to
live among us.
But
how is this possible, and what can we do to have a
foretaste, while still on earth, of the endless joy
we will have in seeing God?
This
is exactly what Jesus revealed to us, this is the
very meaning of his coming: to communicate to us his
life of love with the Father, so that we too can live
it.
We
Christians can live this phrase even now and have
God among us. Of course, to have him among us requires
certain conditions, as affirmed by the Fathers of
the Church. For Basil, the essential condition is
living according to the will of God; for John Chrysostom,
it is to love our neighbor as Jesus did; for Theodore
the Studite, it is mutual love; and for Origen, it
is accord in thought and in feeling, so as to arrive
at that concord which “unites, and contains
the Son of God.”
The
key for allowing God to dwell among us is found in
Jesus’ teachings: “Love one another as
I have loved you” (cf. Jn 13:34). Mutual love
is the key to the presence of God. “As long
as we love one another, God will live in us,”
(1Jn 4:12) “For where two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them’’
(Mt 18:20), says Jesus.
“God
will dwell with them; they will be his people.”
In
this light then, the fulfillment of all the promises
of the Old Covenant - “My dwelling shall be
with them; I will be their God, and they shall be
my people” (Ez. 37:27) - is not far off and
unattainable.
Everything
is already accomplished in Jesus who continues, beyond
his historical existence, to be present among those
who live according to the new law of mutual love,
that law which is the norm that makes them a people,
the people of God.
This
Word of Life is therefore a pressing call, especially
to us Christians, to witness through love to the presence
of God. “This is how all will know that you
are my disciples, if you have love for one another’’
(Jn 13:35). Living out the new commandment sets forth
the conditions for the presence of Jesus among all
people.
We
cannot do anything unless this presence is guaranteed,
a presence which gives meaning to the supernatural
brotherhood that Jesus brought on earth for all humanity.
“God
will dwell with them; they will be his people.”
First
of all, it is up to us, Christians, even though we
belong to different ecclesial communities, to let
the world see “one people” made up of
every ethnic group, race, and culture, adults and
children, sick and well – one people to which
we can apply the words referred to us about the first
Christians: “Look at how they love one another
and are ready to give their life for one another.”
This
is the “miracle” humanity is waiting for
in order to regain hope. It will also make an essential
contribution to progress in ecumenism, the journey
towards full and visible unity among Christians. It’s
a “miracle” within our reach, or better,
within reach of the One who, dwelling among his own
united by love, can change the destiny of the world
and lead all humanity towards unity.