God did the unthinkable.
The God who
had led Abraham from his homeland, the God who had given Abraham the promise of
a land and progeny beyond counting said, “Take your son Isaac, the one you
love, and offer him up as a holocaust.”
In effect, God was saying, “You gave up everything based on my promise,
and I gave you the son who would fulfill that promise. Now, do you love me enough to give it all
back?” Unlike Job from whom God took
everything away, God asked Abraham to give it back freely, to sacrifice
everything he had hoped for and all he had received in willing obedience to
God.
Abraham’s
trust in God enabled him to walk before the Lord in the land of the
living. The land of the living for
Abraham as well for ourselves is always the concrete circumstances and
situations we experience from day to day.
Initially God told Abraham:
“Leave your country, your family and your father’s house, for the land I
will show you. I will make you a great
nation, and I will bless you.” Indeed,
Abraham was faithful to the call of God in his life. He gave up his past. In today’s account, Abraham was being asked
to give up his future as well in sacrificing his only son Isaac.
Abraham’s
response to all of this was: “Here I am Lord.”
In our
Lenten journey and in our life journey, can we say “Here I am Lord” when we face the challenges of life that call us to
give up our past and perhaps our future as well. What is God asking of you this Lent?
Has the Lord
ever asked the unthinkable from you? For
the families of the horrific school killings in Parkland, Florida, they are
confronted with the unthinkable in the death of their sons and daughters?
When you
have the death of a family member, when you deal with illness in your life,
when a significant relationship has gone south in your life, when you have
faced your own addiction, whatever that be, you are confronted with a place you
would rather not be. Where is God for
you at that moment
God never
gives up on us? Can we trust in this God
who never gives up on us? While the
Scriptures challenge us to reflect on what God asks of us, the apostle Paul reminds
what God abundantly shares with us. God
has given His Son, the Lord Jesus, to reveal His love for us and to save us
from our sinfulness.
On this
second Sunday of our Lenten journey, the Church invites to pray over the Transfiguration Gospel account as well as
the Isaac dilemma for Abraham.
In
the Gospel account, Jesus led the apostles Peter, James, and John up a high
mountain apart by themselves He then was
transfigured before them and his clothes became dazzling white…from the cloud
came a voice, “This is my beloved Son, listen to him.”
In
the experience of the Transfiguration, the apostles were given a glimpse of the
risen Lord in his transfigured glory.
Then came the voice of God the Father, “This is my beloved Son, listen
to him.” In our own journey of faith,
and we each have a unique journey. My
journey is not yours and your journey is unique to you, but the common
denominator we all have is the words spoken by God the Father at the
Transfiguration: “Listen to him.” Our journey begins and ends with Jesus. We are to listen and to respond to His call
in our lives.
In the
Transfiguration account, Peter wanted to stay up on the mountain. He said to the Lord: ‘Rabbi, it is good that we are here. Let us make three tents.” But the Lord had other plans for Peter,
James, and John. They were to come down
the mountain and journey to Jerusalem where Jesus was to suffer and to
die. They were called to be the
disciples of the crucified Christ as well as the risen Christ.
The Gospel
invites us to reflect on how are we being called to see with new eyes? What is clouding our view of the transfigured
Christ? How does the world look
different through Jesus’s vision? Does
our identity and our purpose need to be transformed? Most importantly, what is the cross in your
life that identifies you as a disciple of the crucified Christ as well as a
disciple of the Risen Christ?
Personally
speaking every year, I face the same Lenten journey, walk the same way of the
cross, and listen to the same readings more or less. When I begin the season with ashes, I fully
plan to make this the Lent where I pay attention to the conversion to which the
Church and the Gospel calls me. I don’t
mean for time to slip away – yet days fly by.
And I have arrived at Easter without the transformation I intended to
make.
Spiritually
speaking, I need some speed bumps in my Lenten journey to slow me down and to
make me more conscious of my need for conversion and more radically trusting in
God as Abraham did. Perhaps this
describes your Lenten journey as well. For
sure we have our own plans for the Lenten season, but the question is how can
the Lord catch our attention and invite us to
‘Listen to Him’ and His plans for our Lenten journey?
Sometimes
the spiritual speed bump given to us is not of our own choosing – when you are
confronted with the unthinkable in your life.
Perhaps, just perhaps, the Lord is calling you to a deeper relationship
with Him as was the case of Abraham, our father in faith.
We need to
speak to the Lord in prayer and then to listen to the Lord in prayer.
A Lenten
speed bump given to our parish is our Monday evenings of prayer in the Christlike spiritual renewal initiative
in which we are invited to slow down and place ourselves in God’s presence
trusting that all our days are in His hands.
St Paul in
the second Scripture reading says: “If
God is for us, who can be against us?”
Paul ends this beautiful meditation with the words: “For I am convinced that neither death, nor
life, nor angels, nor principalities…nor any other creature will be able to
separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
May our Lenten journey confirm us in our
conviction of faith that there is nothing that will separate us from the love
of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Have a
Blessed Day.
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