bg-image

Fifth Sunday of Lent

Is. 43: 16-21; Ps. 126: 1-6; Phil. 3: 8-14; Jn. 8: 1-11

This is our final Sunday of Lent and I am consoled by the words from St. Paul, “forgetting what lies behind but straining forward to what lies ahead.”  Perhaps the most difficult thing to forget is our mistakes, our sins of the past.  This is because sin brings about suffering and it leaves its scars in our souls.  In the resurrection, Jesus appears to the disciples with the scars of his wounds.  They remain as a reminder of our sins he bears today for us. 

In contrast good time memories seem to need to be summoned up to recall those blessings but our suffering is always before us.  Jesus wants to heal our memories and free us from this cross.  The good news of the gospel is no one can condemn us for no one is without sin and God will not condemn us if we repent and sin no more.  God heals our memory from the pain to go forth to what lies ahead.  Going forth requires new behavior, a change of attitude, and a commitment.  The temptation is to return to the behavior of our past as creatures of habit, the easy road.  The road less traveled is following the path God is calling us to seek. 

This is the time to reflect on my behavior changed this Lent.  Does it have lasting commitment replaced by new behavior for the greater good?    It is easy to see Lent as a temporary behavior adjustment to pray a little more, cut back on some treats, or clean out our closet and give to charity.  Now what?  Do we simply slip back to our past habits or do we continue to pursue the goal, the “prize of God’s upward calling in Christ Jesus”? 

Each moment of life is a new experience and no two moments are exactly the same.  If we read scripture last week and we now read the same scripture passages it may have a new significance given what is going on in our current moment.  The Word of God is organic in its lifegiving principles.  Lent is not intended to be simply a bump on the road of “living my life” but a call to conversion into the image of Jesus in our suffering, our daily duty, our relationship with him and through him with humanity.

Jesus command is direct, “Go, and from now on do not sin anymore.”  Ever wonder what Jesus was writing on the ground for all the Pharisees and scribes to see?  While we don’t know, I suspect a list of sins that the accusers would recognize as their sin on the ground.  The impact of seeing words like adultery, theft, covetousness, gluttony, murder and knowing it applied to them made them drop their rocks and walk away. 

Jewish tradition had many laws to follow, breaking one would be very likely for which they made atonement with sacrifices of animals.  Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement for repentance is found in the Book of Leviticus, chapter 23.  “Blood atonement” by the shedding of innocent blood from a bull and goat in the Holy of Holies was the sacrifice on the altar.  Jesus gives his blood as the spear is thrust into his side and blood and water gush out.  Jesus is the innocent lamb for our sins and we are redeemed by his blood.  The command then for us is “Go forth and sin no more!” 

Mortal life is but a 100 years for some and for most much less but divine life is eternal and every day we are one day closer.  Dare we put off God for tomorrow, if not now when?  “Even now says the Lord, return to me with your whole heart; for I am gracious and merciful”.  Lent is our time of atonement and be washed clean to celebrate Easter with the “upward calling in Christ Jesus”.  The prize is waiting and our time is now.  Don’t leave this world without it.  The prize is heaven in Jesus Christ. 

Tags
Shared this
Views

436 views


bg-image

Solemnity of all Saints

Rv. 7: 2-4, 9-14; Ps. 24: 1-6; 1Jn. 3:1-3; Mt. 5:1-12a

I am reminded by the four angels with the “power to damage the land and the sea” of the Holy Father’s concern for climate change.  History marks periods of climate change whether we read about Noah and the flood in scripture or the great Ice Age there is evidence for climate change causing great damage.  We even see the recent destruction from fires, hurricanes, and earthquakes.  For these families they have endured a “time of great distress”. 

A “time of great distress” happens every moment of life.  Some are very public stories of terrorism, murder, rape, abuse, hunger, war, or spread of disease.  Others are very private stories of tragedy, death, sickness but all a form of great distress for the suffering, poor in spirit, mourning, meek, hungry and thirsty for righteousness.  The world is on a path to destruction from its sins and Jesus comes offering the fulfillment of the Law in a new teaching on life in the spirit of God.  Jesus ascends the mountain as Moses did however Moses received the law from God and Jesus gives the law with authority on the mountain to receive the blessing and great reward in heaven.  God intervenes through his son into the world to save it from destruction of humanity. 

This week we saw the persecution of Jews in a synagogue by a man who stated he simply want to kill Jews.  Christianity was born out of the persecution of Jesus on the cross and continued with persecution of the early church.  Many washed their robes in the blood of their baptism.  Religious persecution exists around the world having to worship underground or live in fear of being targeted.  There are some who wish religious practice was restricted to within the walls of their churches, synagogues, or temples in this country and find offensive for someone to publicly witness to their faith. 

The vision of John reveals the number of those marked by the seal followed by “a great multitude which no one could count from every nation, race, people and tongue”.  There is universality in this declaration of which we are all invited to wear the white robe of salvation and survive a “time of great distress and be washed in the Blood of the Lamb.”  This cleansing began with our baptism and includes the daily cross of life.  We bring our gifts of sacrifice to the altar and we receive the Blood of the Lamb in the Eucharist.  So far so good until the question is asked, “who can ascend the mountain of the Lord?” 

To ascend this mountain requires our purity “as he is pure…one whose hands are sinless, whose heart is clean, who desires not what is vain.”  With one brush of a statement we can feel like a baseball player with three strikes and we’re out.  Take “vanity”, all media promotes a world full of vanity.  From weight loss plans, muscle magazines, Botox, wrinkle free creams, hair restoration and who can live with acne.  We get an overdose of vanity promotion.  Then we look for clean hearts.  Why is it that as soon as we make a resolution to foster a greater virtue we fail the virtue being tested.  My favorite is the test of patience, “Lord may I grow in patience.”  BAM!  Someone gets under my skin and I fall harder than before but perseverance builds the character of patience.  As for sinless “hands” those are the acts with full knowledge and consent of the will to commit the sin but rather than stop we minimalize the sin or rationalize our own justice.  The temptation to sin is given power by self-righteousness, “I deserve to give myself this reward.”  God will one day say, “Did you not give yourself your own rewards where is your sacrifice?”  We carry our sins with us as a vain badge of honor spreading over us as a cancer unrecognizable as God’s creation. 

Who can ascend the mountain is the one of humble heart who cries out to God, “Lord, have mercy on me a sinner.”  The Lord will look at us to identify if we have shown mercy, been peacemakers, and endured our persecution for the sake of righteousness or picked up the sword with our hands or our tongue to claim our own justice.  Today the Church recognizes all those who have washed their robes in the Blood of the Lamb.  They lived as sinners who in their distress sought refuge in God and were given mercy.  It is our invitation today to come to him with humble contrite heart and in mercy wash our robes from the stain of sin. 

Dante said we go to purgatory to wash our robes from the stain of sin.  He reminds us of the old Midas commercial, “pay me now or pay me later.”  Purity of mind, heart, and spirit cannot be purchased.  Jesus already purchased for us the redemption from our sin.  We are here not to pay up but to receive our just reward from God our savior.  If the Lord is to call us today are we ready?  The first step is the sacrament of confession, the penance given is to go forth to love and serve the Lord, and the narrow way is the sacramental life in communion with the Trinity, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the angels and all the saints.  The God who is we will see as he is for we are a people who longs to see his face.  “What we shall be has not yet been revealed” but don’t expect the vanity of looking 21 again, regaining lost hair, or getting rid of the gray and wrinkles.  Expect the spirit of purity and sainthood. 

I heart a quote from Saint Mother Teresa of Calcutta.  She stated, “Good people do good things, holy people do God’s things”.  He made one Saint Teresa, on Saint Padre Pio, one Saint Francis of Assisi, one Saint John Paul II and one Saint Francis Xavier.  He also made one of you and me. Our holiness will come from doing “God things” that we are called to do.  Where you are there your will find those things.  Be the best you were created to be in the moment and as one writer put it, “wherever you go you are there” but also wherever you go God is there to do God’s things.  Search and you will find, call and he will answer. 

 

 

Tags
Shared this
Views

355 views