Today, once more, the
Gospel reveals to us God's heart. It gives us to understand the feelings the
Father in Heaven reacts with, in relation to his children. His most
impassionate concern is for the small ones, those, which nobody ever pays any
attention to, those who do not attain wherever the rest of the world does. We
already knew that the Father, as the good Father He is, has a preference for
the small children, but to day we can recognize another wish of the Father that
becomes compulsory for us: «I assure you that unless you change and become like
little children, you cannot enter the kingdom of Heaven» (Mt 18:3).
We, therefore, realize that what the Father values the
most is not so much "being small", as "becoming lowly". «Whoever becomes lowly
(...) is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven» (Mt 18:4). This is why we can see our
responsibility in this action of becoming lowly. It is not a matter of having
been created small or simple, limited or more or less capable, but of being
able to keep off any eventual greatness while remaining to the level of the
humbler and simpler. The actual importance of each one consists in resembling
one of those small ones Jesus introduces us to.
Last but not least, the Gospel teaches us today another
lesson. There are, and closer to us than we think! some "small ones" that we
may eventually have more forsaken than others: those that are like sheep gone
astray; the Father looks for them and, when He finds them, He is more pleased
because they come back home and do not go stray any more. Perhaps, if we should
try to look at those surrounding us more as sheep sought and found by the
Father than just sheep gone astray, we could also see more often and closer
God's face. St. Asterius of Amasea tells us: «The parable of the lost sheep and
the shepherd teaches us that we must not easily despair of those who are in
danger or be slow to help them» .