DYNAMIS!
A publication of St. George Orthodox Christian Cathedral
Wichita, KS
St. Mark 12: 38-44
(1/3)
For Thursday of the 31st Week after Pentecost(Thur of P &P)
Two
Cents Worth: St. Mark 12:38-44, especially vs. 43: “So
He called His disciples to Himself and said to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to
you that this poor widow has put in more than all those who have given to the
treasury....’” Today
inflation has so eroded the value of the little penny, taking away even the
poor thing’s copper heart, so that the majority of people will not bend
down to pick up one that has dropped on a parking lot or sidewalk. Still, in commerce and business, despite
devaluation, one can hear people say that they hope “to get their two
cents worth.” What then? Do you think the widow got her two cents
worth?
The
whole of the matter when we give tithes and offerings, pray
to the Lord, worship at His Holy Altar, or invest time and energy in any good
work of the
However,
when it comes to intent, and we examine carefully the vitality of our
intentions, how often we find that our souls function like poor beggars, with
little to offer to our All-giving Lord!
Each of us has said, “I have united myself to Christ, believe in
Him as King and God, and bow down also before Him.” Only let each of us admit with the
Pilgrim: “I do not love God.
For if I loved God I should be continually thinking about Him with
heartfelt joy....On the contrary, I much more often and much more eagerly think
about earthly things, and thinking about God is labor and dryness.” Our souls mostly have only two cents
worth of Godly intention.
What
then? Shall we not at least give
that little bit of love and devotion that we do have to our Life-giving
Savior? “Lord, I believe,
help my unbelief” (Mk. 9:24)!
Let us offer our paltry love to our King and our God and have joy in
doing so, for even this one tiny mite of imperfect love, when offered together
with the mite of repentance, will be received with “joy in heaven”
(Lk. 15:7).
These are the two mites that our poor widowed souls can offer to God in
hope.
Make no
mistake about it: Christ sits “opposite the treasury and [sees] how the
people put money into the treasury” (Mk. 12:41). Even our shame at our lackluster love is
the beginning of repentance. It is
a tiny mite, but it is something.
It represents the first waking breath within us of the knowledge of how
very greatly God loves us. Let us
keep this truth in mind, reflecting on the Giver, the Lover, the One Who became
poor for our sake, that we might be rich (2 Cor.
8:9). Though we have no basis for
pride in what we give, let us give, and pray, worship, and invest ourselves to
the degree that His love stirs up even a tiny response in our shrunken hearts. For when the widowed soul “out of
her poverty [puts] in all that she [has], her whole livelihood” (Mk.
12:44), God sees and blesses her with His great love. She will get infinitely more than two
cents worth.
O Lord
God Almighty, Who alone art Holy, Who dost accept the
sacrifice of praise from those who call upon Thee with their whole heart:
Receive also the prayer of us sinners.
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to the January Calendar