Learning the Lesson

Armodoxy for Today: Learning the Lesson

Most probably everyone has at one time, or another, brought their hand close enough to an open flame or a hot object to feel the heat, and then quickly retracted their hand before a burn. And sometimes, maybe not quick enough, with blisters betraying the slow withdrawal we feel the pain. Most everyone has come to learn to be cautious of heat because of their near-burn experiences. No matter how many times a child is warned, it’s that close the encounter with the heat source that drives home the point that a flame can burn.

Imagine if we didn’t learn from our mistakes. Imagine if every time we saw an open flame we had to bring our hand close enough to it to feel the heat, retract our hand, and then, only then, realize that it can burn. Yes, experience is the best instructor, provided we learn from our mistakes.

Jesus tells a parable in Matthew 18 about a man who is given a lesson on forgiveness, when his debt is cancelled by his creditor. Yet, when he finds someone who owes him money, he does not show any compassion nor mercy and demands that the debt be paid immediately. While the parable focuses on the act of forgiveness, there is an underlying lesson on the responsibility that comes from learning.

All of life is a learning experience, with events that beg us to make decisions. Those decisions are based on what we have learned, by the many lessons that life teaches us.

Armenians are the people of the Cross, a fact that is celebrated by the Armenian Church through its liturgics and teachings. The Cross is a symbol of suffering and victory, of crucifixion and resurrection, for the Armenian people. They have learned the lessons and the way of the cross from their history as a Christian nation. 1915 records the first Genocide of the 20th Century which took place against the Armenian people living in the Ottoman Empire. A hundred-plus years later, (2023) the campaign of ethnic cleansing took place on Armenian lands again, in Artsakh. The world looked on in 1915 and again in 2023, Another lesson learned – to have genocide and to be isolated in in the world.

Today another campaign of ethnic cleansing takes place and is publicized on media centers all over, to a world deaf and numb to the news. A genocide is taking place in Gaza. It is not a political issue, but a humanitarian one. The Armenian Church is a witness to the crucifixion – a witness to the Cross – and cannot remain quiet while professing the Gospel of Resurrection. Herein we understand that necessity for Armodoxy, the Armenian Church in action in our world today. To apply what we learn to life today is what is demanded of us as humans. It is the underlying lesson of the parable Jesus uses to teach us to learn from our past.

There are many lessons that are more painful and more severe than a burn from an open flame. The soul of humanity is lost when we ignore the most fundamental lessons of speaking out in the silence for justice and life.

We pray for courage to stand up for what is right, even when it is difficult. Help us to be instruments of Your peace and justice, reflecting Your love in all we do. Amen.

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