We like to think of ourselves as a people who compassionately care for the needs of others. We're comforted when our donations to the Red Cross are found helping victims of storms. We feel good about giving to St. Jude's Children's Hospital. We no doubt from time to time hand cash to that beggar on the corner. In all of this we "feel" like we're being selfless, "Doing the Lord's work," so to speak. Doing works such as these is a wonderful thing. It is in fact following our Lord's commandment to care for "the least of His brethren." (Mat 25:40)
However, it doesn't take a lot of thought to come up with ways in which selfishness rears its ugly head in our day-to-day lives. There's the evidence found on any given black Friday when people push and shove others out of the way to get one of the first 50 tv's on sale for half off. There's the recent memory of hoarding of toilet paper as the pandemic struck. There are the people who know that a highway is necking down from two lanes to one but choose to take the "me first" lane and cut in front of those who have the discipline to follow the rules.
And so we understand that selfishness still abounds around us. But we often remind those who are part of our worshipping community that there IS a time and a purpose where selfishness is a virtue rather than a vice. When?
Being selfish for my salvation!
Finding the path to salvation (Theosis) is a path of finding peace in our lives. St. Seraphim of Sarov famously said, "Acquire a peaceful spirit and thousands around you will be saved." And so seeking salvation, while able to be couched as a selfish act, carries with it the corollary that those with such a spirit will be found to help those "least of His brethren" who will be exposed to his or her peaceful spirit.
Consider the thieves crucified with our Lord. The one on the left uttered a "prayer" that said this: "If You are the Christ, save Yourself - and us!" It's a very contemporary kind of prayer. It basically says, "Give me what I want, and give it to me NOW!"
The wise thief on the right prayed with greater wisdom. "Remember me, O Lord, when You come into Your kingdom!" (Luke 23:39-42) The prayer asks for nothing immediate. It pleads for a promise of blessings to come. It is 'selfishly' humble.
Had our Lord granted the prayer of the left thief, the act would have impacted three souls, and it would have extended this life only, providing noting eternal. Granting the prayer of the right thief, salvation becomes available to any human soul that believes in the Lord, and it saves not this perishable life, but provides entrance to life eternal.
And so each of us must live our lives working out our own salvation. "Therefore, my beloved, ... work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure." (Phil 2:12-13) We are called to do this by using the talents given us by God. “Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms.” (1 Peter 4:10)
If we can do these things, perhaps we will find that peace in our lives, the peace that can be seen by others so that they, too, with the help of the Holy Spirit, might through their own prayers and inspired use of talents, find their own path to salvation.