Sunday Gospel Reflection
          October 5, 2025
          Luke 17:5-10
Reprinted
            by permission of the Arlington Catholic Herald
Deserving
            Heaven
            by Fr. Richard A. Miserendino 
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Do we deserve heaven? Or
        better yet,
        does God owe us eternal life? It’s a reasonable question,
        especially given our
        penchant for speaking of the deceased as “going to their eternal
        reward.” It
        betrays common misconceptions about eternal life.
On the one hand, we
        often inadvertently
        speak of heaven as a prize for doing extremely good deeds or
        winning the local
        theological spelling bee. On the other hand, the language seems
        almost
        contractual: We do work for about 80 years here below and try to
        be nice and
        not make too big a mess, and God compensates us with a set of
        wings, a
        personalized cloud, and a harp. So long as our good deeds
        outweigh the bad, God
        is on the hook for our eternal rest. Thus says the fine print of
        our contract,
        if only we can remember where we’d put it.
Set against those
        fantasies is our
        Gospel today from St. Luke, in which Jesus levies two sharp
        reminders to us
        disciples. They seem unconnected at first glance, but both are
        related to
        salvation and the type of relationship that can enter eternal
        life.
Consider the first: The
        disciples ask
        to have their faith increased. Jesus responds enigmatically —
        faith the size of
        a mustard seed can work miracles.
Is he condemning their
        faith as too
        small or non-existent? Likely not. He’s taking issue with the
        word “increase”
        and how it relates to magnitude. How often do we think that the
        fullness of the
        Christian faith is only for the “holy rollers” or the
        theologians? For example
        — “If only I were a monk or a missionary, then I’d be a saint!”
        or “If only I
        had a Ph.D. in theology, then I’d really know the faith.”
While certainly not
        knocking religious
        life or theology professors, what every Christian should
        understand is that the
        simple baptismal faith the size of a mustard seed does the
        trick, when lived
        not in “larger or smaller magnitude,” but in deep trust in love.
        Faith, love
        and trust, when given totally, even from the smallest heart, are
        the real
        treasure. Like the widow’s mite, it’s not the magnitude of the
        contribution,
        but the spiritual weight and meaning of it that matter.
The second parable is
        like it, albeit
        crunchier: Can you imagine the king of England coming back to
        Buckingham
        Palace, realizing the servants have had a hard day of polishing
        the silver, and
        then inviting them to dine whilst he waits on them? Or an
        employer who gives
        their workers the rest of the day off because they showed up on
        time having
        navigated I-395? Not likely.
The point of this
        parable drives at a
        different but related misconception about salvation: That God
        owes us eternal
        life and joy for being a “good person” here below, regardless of
        our interior
        disposition. Jesus points out the incongruity — even if we’re
        good stewards and
        servants in the sense that we work hard and clock the hours —
        the master still
        doesn’t owe them a ticker-tape parade and a raise. Doing good,
        being a “good
        person,” is not above and beyond the call of duty. It’s the
        simple basic
        pattern of duty. That people commonly and boldly confess things
        like “Well, I
        never killed anyone” to signal their virtue is not encouraging.
        It is, in fact,
        a low bar. Here again, God does not want employees who reliably
        do the daily
        grind work even though their heart is elsewhere. He wants their
        hearts and
        minds given in faith, love and trust.
Put another way: The
        first part of the
        Gospel dispelled the notion that monumental deeds,
        golden-tongued prayers, or
        deep theological insights are the essence of deeper, saving
        faith. The second
        part strikes at the notion that salvation is just a reward in
        the opposite
        sense. Heaven is also not the run-of-the-mill salary and pension
        issued to all
        employees of GOD Inc. who have consistently clocked 9-5 workdays
        and not
        overused our personal or sick leave.
Behind all this is a
        point. Heaven, it
        turns out, is a share in the ecstasy of God’s divine life for
        all eternity. But
        God’s life is properly God’s, not ours. We can have no “rights”
        to it, nor can
        we earn it any more than we could have “rights” or “earn”
        someone else’s kidney
        or liver.
God’s life can only be
        received as a
        gift, in our delight and wonder like a child on Christmas wholly
        absorbed by
        the generosity and freedom of the thing. And in turn, that means
        the opening of
        our whole heart and mind and presenting that as a gift to God in
        return. That’s
        the faith that is “large” enough, total enough, pushing beyond
        both the pride
        and apathy to encounter grace. And miraculously, when we have
        faith like that,
        it is in fact enough to move mulberry trees and mountains and
        even transform stone
        hearts to flesh and death to life.
We even find that we’re
        servants
        invited to the master’s house, where beyond all worldly
        expectation, we’re
        guests served by the master himself at the wedding feast of the
        lamb.