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2nd Sunday of Lent – “Listen to him”

Gen. 12:1-4a; Ps. 33:4-5, 18-20, 22; 2 Tm. 1:8b-10; Mt.17:1-9

“Listen to him!”  This Lent when God speaks to us in his word, in our prayer, and in our relationships, we listen to him in order to respond to his call.  When we listen to him with our heart and mind, he tells us to “rise, and do not be afraid” to take the right next step in our faith journey.  That step is rooted in the love of God and other.  It is rooted in mercy and forgiveness.  God is calling us to a conversion of greater love and mercy.  “Listen to him” forgive and you will be forgiven, give and it shall be given to you, be humble and you will be lifted up.  To listen is to desire something greater in our lives, more of God and less of this world.   

When the Lord called on Abram, he asked him to leave behind his homeland, his comforts and “go forth” to a land he will show him.  He did not promise it would be easy, without sacrifice, but he would bless him and a great nation would come from him.  God never promises the easy road, and Jesus chose the via dolorosa, the way of suffering to make of us a great nation of followers of the way of salvation. 

Thus, we are reminded to “bear your share of hardship for the gospel.”  Alone it is unbearable but our strength comes from God when we listen to him and live according to his own design.  His design is for a life of holiness and holiness destroys death and gives life immortal.  We ask ourselves this Lent to bear our share of the gospel through prayer, fasting and almsgiving.  Our prayer is efficacious, it makes a difference but we out to know how to pray. 

Recall the acronym of prayer ACTS, adoration, contrition, thanksgiving and supplication?  Adoration is our worship of God, contrition our desire for mercy for our sins, thanksgiving recognizes the blessings we have received, and supplication is for our needs and the needs of others by the will of God not our will.  “God if it be your will let it be done.”   This is prayer that is efficacious for our good, the good of others and of this world. 

Fasting is not only good for the soul but good for the body.  Our bodies are filled with toxins that build up from our indulgence.  The reality is that we consume more than we need and all that consumption creates inflammation, brain fog, and by chronic consumption leads to early disease and death.  We are out of balance in our consumption and fasting helps to detox our bodies, restore our mind-body control, and open our soul to listen to him. 

I propose to you a different kind of fasting than what we normally think of with food.  Try fasting from what consumes our time outside of our commitments to work, school or family.  Is it television, social media, talking on the phone, or try putting down that golf club, fishing pole or rushing to the bingo hall.  Discover the withdrawal for all those activities that have become our addiction to this world and left so very little time for God.  Imagine your world without the novela, without the news channel, without tik-tok, without gaming, without gossip, without that obsession that is taking over our time.  Now we’re talking, now were fasting the mind and body. 

Almsgiving is going beyond our pocket change to the person on the street.  Almsgiving is taking from what we have and letting go from our feeling of dependency on having more.  Do we really need that many pairs of shoes, hats, tools, coats, blankets, or whatever clutters our drawers and closets.  Ask a man and you can never have enough screw drivers; ask a woman and you can never have enough shoes; or ask a child these days and you can never have enough memory for all their gaming toys.  Almsgiving is also about letting go and giving to those who have not. 

In many ways the message does not change.  What changes is our readiness to listen to him and to respond “Here I am, Lord ready to do your will.”  Lent is this invitation for us to face the enemy of our salvation.  The enemy is threefold, the flesh, the world, and Satan.  They do not operate separately but are always at work together for what we experience in one area is an opportunity for the participation from the enemy in other areas. 

The flesh is our appetite from within as the mind seeks to satisfy the flesh in all its passions, physical, sexual, and psychological.  The flesh triggers the mind to crave self indulgence to the degree that whatever the flesh desires then become the god of the flesh, destroying the body and corrupting the soul.  The person becomes the slave of the flesh. 

The world is its own god seeking to finds its slaves.  Its temptation is to all the riches and beauty the world has to be conquered but this is a false illusion.  The world will not be conquered by becoming part of the world.  We are in the world but not of the world meaning we serve our God in the world and the world can be of service to us but not our quest.  We learn, work, and participate in the world in order to bring to the world the gospel message by the way we live our lives. 

The evil one is the least powerful in our lives because by the cross we have been redeemed unless we open ourselves up to him and sadly many unwittingly have done just that.  From taking up astrology to the Ouija board, from palm readers to “curanderas”, it is all part of the culture of death.  The evil one desires our death, and he relies on the world to be its weapon of destruction to bring about hopelessness.  “See how good the world is, indulge and be lost in the world” or Satan can just as quickly turn it around and say, “See how bad the world is today, there is no god that can save it” and lead us to hopelessness.  Satan is the master of lies but Jesus is revealing to us the eternal truth this day. 

The secret is out in the transfiguration today.  The vision of Moses and Elijah next to Jesus is a vision of immortality.  They are alive and they share in the light of God.  The secret of the vision is the divinity of Jesus “true God and true man”.  This is our faith that Jesus is one divine person with two natures.  The sign of Moses and Elijah is that we too are invited to rise above our human nature into the divine life through the waters of baptism.  This is a great hope, and many have come to listen to him, some with the red robe of martyrdom and others with the white robe of perfection, through blood and water. The secret is out “the Son of Man has been raised from the dead” and we are invited to enter into the divine life. 

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2nd Sunday of Lent – The Transfiguration

Gen. 15:5-12, 17-18; Ps. 27:1, 7-9, 13-14; Phil. 3:17—4:1; Lk. 9:28b-36

The Transfiguration of Jesus is a revelation of the glory of God in the person of Jesus true God and true man “listen to Him”.  It is also a revelation that not only is Elijah and Moses alive in heaven but all those called to sainthood who responded in this life by giving up their mortal life in this world for the eternal one to come at the end of life.  When the Holy Spirit comes, we enter into the transfiguration to be holy as priest, prophet and king.  Today we are the ones being called to holiness, to be transformed into the image of Christ, to walk transfigured as the light in the darkness of the world. 

The transfiguration of Abram began as he put “his faith in the Lord…as an act of righteousness.”  Abram’s transfiguration came as he obeyed the Lord bringing forth the sacrificial gifts commanded of him.  Abram fell into a “trance” and in the darkness of the night “there appeared a smoking fire pot and a flaming torch” and God made “a covenant with Abram, saying: ‘To your descendants I give this land, from the Wadi of Egypt to the Great River, the Euphrates.”  If we desire the same change in our lives to receive the promise then it begins with our obedience to the sacraments of the church to who the keys to the kingdom were given.  In them we bring the gift of ourselves as the sacrifice just as Jesus gave witness by his obedience and sacrifice of himself on the cross.  We are to take up our cross and follow in his footsteps and be transformed into his image.

St. Paul in his letter to the Philippians reminds us that many “conduct themselves as enemies of the cross of Christ.  Their end is destruction.”  He invites us to be “imitators” of him who is the imitator of Christ.  The transfiguration of our mortal self from death to life will never come from “being occupied with earthly things.”  It can only give testimony to our “shame”.  Jesus will “change our lowly body to conform with his glorified body” and we will be like him transfigured into the glorified state of heaven.  Our call this day is to enter into the discipline of Lent with the goal of transforming our minds, hearts and bodies.  The Lord provides the channel of grace through fasting, abstinence and alms giving. 

The transfiguration of our bodies through fasting is a purging of the habit of indulgence of the flesh to rule our bodies and not be ruled by the hunger of the body.  The transfiguration of our heart is through abstinence from sin and the near temptation to sin that our eyes may gaze upon the passion of the Lord and not on our earthly passions.  The transfiguration of the mind is through our almsgiving that we may focus on the needs of others and by our generosity receive the reward of heaven.  We are invited to be transfigured by transforming our very self into the image of Christ as we offer our very self up to him and pray “let thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” 

The transfiguration of Jesus came prior to his death and resurrection as a sign of hope and a calling that we are not to wait for death to enter holiness.  Holiness is to be our walk with Jesus this day.  Holiness manifests itself as a “servant” of Jesus willing to take up our cross and follow to the land of “milk and honey”, the promise land into the kingdom of God.  This comes to us when we do as God the Father says to Peter, John and James “This is my chosen Son; listen to him.”  Are we listening?  Lent is a call to increase our listening by prayer, study of the Word, and worship in fellowship as the body of Christ in the celebration of the Mass.  We listen to the voice of God in the liturgy and the word of knowledge sends us forth to do the works of the Lord. 

Jesus speaks to our soul as our mind is stilled to listen, our heart burns with understanding, and we are moved to right action.  By the Lord’s grace we come to know him, love him and serve him.  Let us call upon Jesus Christ to receive his grace and be transformed into his image and we will join in the chorus of the saints “The Lord is my light and my salvation” in him do I live, move, and celebrate with the angels and the saints.  Our transfiguration is a deepening of our faith, hope and love.  By deepening ourselves in Christ we become detached to the offering of the world that is transient and we are focused on what is salvific and eternal.  Jesus saves!  Our destiny is eternal.  Lent calls us to examine ourselves, our priorities, and our purpose in living and see where are we headed. 

The path of righteousness is a choice.  Choose life, choose love, choose Jesus and all other gifts will follow.  Lent is a time to prepare our “toolbox” for overcoming this world.  Jesus comes in the transfiguration from the old self to the redeemed self.  In him we are saved! Listen to him and be saved.

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