Patience and Salvation

Note: On Tuesdays and some Sundays, you can find me at Your Daily Tripod, owned by my friend TonyD. A longer version of the post below appears there.

And consider the patience of our Lord as salvation… (2 Peter 3:15, NABRE)

I don’t wait for walk signs. I’ve fallen down Metro escalators three times, once breaking a toe in two places, because standing rather than moving doesn’t come naturally to me. At work, when something needs to get done, not necessarily perfectly but done, I’ve always been the go-to girl.

I’m self-aware enough to understand that the Lord has blessed me with many gifts and virtues. Patience is not among them.

That’s why I was struck by this phrase from today’s first reading: “Consider the patience of our Lord as salvation.” Of course, the Lord is patient; if He weren’t, He’d have given up on mankind centuries ago. But there’s something about that direct linkage between patience and salvation that seems so deep. God’s not one to cut His losses and move on to the next soul. He waits for our obedience, providing a few nudges and gentle guidance along the way, but he waits. It’s downright countercultural. His waiting benefits us more than it benefits Him.

The vicar at my parish recently said in a homily that while God is loving, we miss the point when we stop there, before we get to God is love. There’s a big difference when you stop and think about it, and it fits beautifully with Peter’s advice to us. Maybe for God, patience and love are intertwined. Maybe both would be easier for us to understand—and render upon Him—if we saw them both as synonymous with salvation, and salvation as something we cannot achieve without them—and Him.

By Melanie

Melanie Rigney is the author of Radical Saints: 21 Women for the 21st Century and other Catholic books. She is a contributor to Living Faith and other Catholic blogs. She lives in Arlington, Virginia. Melanie also owns Editor for You, a publishing consultancy that since 2003 has helped hundreds of writers, publishers, and agents.

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