Sunday
              Gospel Reflection
August
            24, 2025 Cycle C
            Luke 13:22-30
          Reprinted by permission of the “Arlington
            Catholic Herald.”
How Many Will Be Saved?
          Fr. Steven G. Oetjen
          
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Someone asks Jesus a
        question in
        today’s Gospel, and we could wonder about his motivations.
        “Lord, will only a
        few people be saved?” Does he want the answer to be yes or no?
        He might want to
        hear that only a few will be saved — for example, that only the
        Jews would be
        saved, and the Gentiles would remain uninvited to the kingdom —
        as long as he
        feels his own salvation is “in the bag.”
He would feel special
        being part of an
        elite few, and he would feel secure knowing that his salvation
        was already a
        done deal, determined by the fact that he was circumcised and a
        descendant of
        Abraham, or that he spent some time in proximity to the Messiah.
On the other hand, if he
        was unsure of
        his own salvation, he might want to hear that many are saved. If
        salvation is
        limited to a few, how could he be sure that he would make the
        cut? If many will
        be saved, then maybe he has a better chance, hopefully without
        the need to
        apply himself to anything difficult.
We do not know for sure
        the man’s
        motivation in asking the question. But whatever it was, Jesus’
        answer shows how
        both of those possible motivations are misdirected.
“Strive to enter through
        the narrow
        gate, for many, I tell you, will attempt to enter but will not
        be strong
        enough,” he says. He continues, explaining that it will not be
        enough to say
        that you ate and drank with the Messiah, or that he taught in
        your streets.
        While those unworthy will be locked out of the kingdom and told
        to depart,
        “people will come from the east and the west and from the north
        and the south
        and will recline at table in the kingdom of God.”
So, is Jesus’ response
        restrictive or
        expansive? Is he saying that few will be saved, or many? He is
        saying both, in
        different senses (few and many are relative terms, after all).
        The offer of
        salvation is given to all people, Jew and Gentile alike, through
        Christ Jesus.
        People will come into the kingdom from every direction, north,
        south, east and
        west. In this sense, his answer is expansive and not
        restrictive.
Nevertheless, he says
        that many will
        try to enter and will fail to do so. One does not simply coast
        into heaven
        automatically. There is an earnest striving required: “Strive to
        enter through
        the narrow gate.”
This is how his answer
        is both
        restrictive and expansive. It is expansive (universal, in fact)
        with respect to
        the offer of salvation and restrictive with respect to the
        difficulty.  As Pope
        Benedict XVI explained in his Angelus
        address Aug. 26, 2007, “The passage to eternal life is open to
        all, but it is
        ‘narrow’ because it is demanding: it requires commitment,
        self-denial and the
        mortification of one’s selfishness … Salvation, which Jesus
        brought with his
        death and Resurrection, is universal. He is the One Redeemer and
        invites
        everyone to the banquet of immortal life; but on one and the
        same condition:
        that of striving to follow and imitate him, taking up one’s
        cross as he did,
        and devoting one’s life to serving the brethren. This condition
        for entering heavenly
        life is consequently one and universal.”
The man who asked the
        question might
        have been hoping for exactly the opposite answer: that salvation
        was restricted
        to a few, a group to which he already surely belonged, and yet
        expansive in the
        sense of being easy for everyone already in that group. Not so.
This teaching is
        profitable for us,
        even if we were not asking the question. We might fall into the
        same trap,
        presuming that our own salvation is “in the bag” because we eat
        and drink with
        the Lord (in fact we eat and drink the Lord’s very body and
        blood in the most
        holy Eucharist), and we constantly hear him teach “in our
        streets” through the
        teaching of the church. St. Paul reminds us that it is possible
        to eat and
        drink our own condemnation through unworthy reception of the
        Blessed Sacrament
        (1 Cor 11:29), and Our Lord teaches us that it is not enough
        merely to be in
        close physical proximity to him as mere bystanders “hanging
        around.” We must
        follow him and conform our wills to his.