GOOD AND FAITHFUL SERVANT
By Karl Rahner1
◊◊◊
Are there not people today who, if they are true to their character as willed
by God, are a people of small means, of hard work, of only a few words, of loyalty
of heart and simple sincerity? Certainly, every Christian and every Christian
nation is charged with the entire fullness of Christian perfection as a duty that
is never completed. But every nation and every person has, so to speak, his own
door, his own approach, through which he alone can come nearer to the fullness
of Christianity. Not all of us will find access to the boundless vistas of God’s
world through the great gate of surging rapture and burning ardor. Some must
go through the small gate of quiet loyalty and the ordinary, exact performance
of duty. And it is this fact, I am inclined to think, that can help us to discover a
rapport between earth and heaven, between Christians today and their heavenly
intercessor…
[Joseph] received into his family the One who came to redeem his nation
from their sin, One to whom he himself gave the name of Jesus, a name which
means “Yahweh is Salvation.” Silent and loyal, he served the eternal Word of
the Father, the Word who had become a child of this world. And they called
their Redeemer the son of a carpenter. When the eternal Word was audible in
the world in the message of the gospels, Joseph, having quietly done his duty,
went away without any notice on the part of this world.
But the life of this insignificant man did have significance; it had one
meaning that, in the long run, counts in each one’s life: God and his incarnate
grace. To him it could be said: “Good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of
your Lord.” Who can doubt that this man is a good patron for us? This man of
humble, everyday routine, this man of silent performance of duty, of honest5
righteousness and of manly piety, this man who was charged with protecting
the grace of God in its embodied life.
Christians of today might find their way back to what is best in them if the
individuality of this man, their patron, were again producing more stature in
them. Granted, a nation must have greatness of spirit and pioneers who will
lead her towards new goals. Just as much, if not more so, however, a nation
needs men and women of life-long performance of duty, of clear-headed loyalty,
of discipline of heart and body.
A nation needs those who know that true greatness is achieved only in
selfless service to the greater and holy duty that is imposed upon each life; those
of genuine reverence, conquerors of themselves, who hear the word of God and
carry out the inflexible decrees of conscience. It needs those who through their
lives bear the childlike, defenseless grace of God past all those who, like Herod,
attempt to kill this grace. A nation needs those who do not lose confidence in
God’s grace, even when they have to seek it as lost, as Joseph once sought the
divine child. Such as these are urgently needed in every situation and in every
class. We have a good patron, who is suitable for everyone. For he is a patron of
the poor, a patron of working men and women, a patron of exiles, a model for
worshipers, an exemplar of the pure discipline of the heart, a prototype of
fathers who protect in their children the Son of the Father.