"Remember, I am with you always to the end of the age" (Mt 28:20)

Good and Bad Fruits


T
he first consideration is the fruitfulness of good or just works and deeds. We can see this point in St Paul's letter to the Corinthians: “Brothers and sisters, consider this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each must do… without sadness or compulsion… so that in all things… you may have an abundance for every good work” (2 Corinthians 9:6-7). The very sign of good works is that it is fruitful. There is something that comes out or is produced. Recall all of the good things that you have done and I am very sure they all produced some fruits no matter how small. Those who gave all out also reaped bountifully. Those who withheld something also reaped very sparingly. This is the reason why St Paul said “God loves a cheerful giver” to encourage the various Churches or communities to be generous. The fact that he needed to encourage them meant that there were those who were keeping things to themselves. They were not all out in their righteous deeds. But there is a warning that Jesus gives against parading good works: "they should be known only to our Father in heaven." What is that which should be known to the Father alone? They are the fruits of every good work.

Second, there is a very thin line of distinction between the good fruits and the bad fruits. Jesus enumerates how something good like almsgiving, prayer, and fasting could result into rotten effects when there are impure motivations or intentions, that can spoil, in a manner of speaking, the good works. Like when a righteous act of almsgiving is being paraded for self-promotion towards sanctity. Jesus says those who do such things already get what they wanted. Secondly, on the good work of praying and conversing with God. That too tremendously loses its worth when it becomes lip service, praying without a heart and it makes the just act of praying to God reverting to "just talk." Did you have a similar experience like that? You started doing something with a noble intention then after some time the fruits get spoiled by selfish or impure motives. It would be good if the person realizes it early on in contrast to someone who has no awareness of one’s hidden agenda. It can be tricky sometimes and we are encouraged to cultivate St Ignatius’s spiritual tool of discernment of spirits at all times.

For our third and final consideration, like the sign of Jonah the ultimate sign in our good works is the Lord's presence. God could easily be forgotten most especially when we are successful in performing and doing a lot of good works. In the first place, we must ask "Who made it possible for us to do all those good things? Who is the source? Do these come from just our own good will alone?" The clear and resounding answer to that is this: No, because God is the only one who is righteous among us. God alone is just, holy and perfect. It was the prophet Jeremiah who said that the name of the Messiah will be: “The Lord is our Righteousness." While God is just, we are not just, because we do not have any righteousness in our own terms. If we begin looking at righteousness as something that is personally produced, the fruits become infested with pests and disaster often happens. But once we acknowledge that everything has been received from God and that we can do nothing except through the grace of God who initiates then we are able to save the fruits of our good works and these become all the more enduring and produce abundant fruits. This is the point of St Paul when, in his letter, he quoted from Scripture, "As it is written: He scatters abroad, he gives to the poor; his righteousness endures forever. The one who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed and increase the harvest of your righteousness. You are being enriched in every way for all generosity, which through us produces thanksgiving to God" (2 Corinthians 9:9-11).

Most of all God is generous despite how all of us have fallen short of our righteousness. We are truly blessed because we have a just God who does not keep things to himself rather he is a God who is all out in giving and forgiving, and God does it cheerfully. That is called mercy of God who never tires of giving and forgiving. This is not just a sign, it is God's nature. He knows and "loves the cheerful giver" among us. We become the cheerful giver whenever we show mercy towards others too. Indeed, after God has already given, he likewise teaches us how to be a sharer of God's justice and righteousness. When God gives he teaches us how to give as well. How are you responding to such an invitation to be God’s sharer of his righteousness to others? How do you participate in the righteousness and mercy of God in your unique way? Amen, Fr JM Manzano SJ

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