Fourth Sunday of Lent
B 2024
For God so
loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him
might not perish but might have eternal life.
For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but
that the world might be saved through him.
This is a
Gospel within the Gospel…. the famous John 3/16. The core of the Gospel’s Good News is that
God so loved the world that he gave his only Son to this real and very
imperfect world…so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might
have eternal life. God’s plan for us is
not eternal death but eternal life. It
is time to unleash the power of the Good News that is contained in this simple
passage and allow it change people’s lives.
The image of God that today’s Scripture reveal is a God who is
relentless in reaching out to lost humanity.
God never gives up on us.
On this
Laetare Sunday, halfway through the Lenten season, the Church invites us to
reflect on God’s love for the world, and to be joyful because of it. The Church invites us in the middle of this
penitential season to rejoice? Why? Because God loves each and every one so much
that he gave his only Son.
Even though
all of us know the weakness of sin in our lives, God’s love for us is without
end.
Today in the
first Scripture reading we see the effects of the weakness of sin very
dramatically with the Israelites. The
situation depicted is one of the darkest chapter in the history of God’s chosen
people. The Jews fell away from their
attachment to the Temple worship and practices, the nation suffered; the Temple
was destroyed and many were exiled into Babylon as servants and slaves in what
is called the Babylonian Exile.
How could
lax religious practices lead to the fall of a mighty nation? Simply put, without meaningful prayer the
Jews lost a sense of who they were. In
their behavior they compromised their way toward defeat and destruction by
letting themselves believe that their spirituality did not matter.
Thankfully,
thankfully God did not give up on the Israelites. At the end of the sacred book of the
Chronicles, we hear God calling His people to put their Temple back as central
to their lives.
Through the
Old Testament Book of the Chronicles we can visit our own faith history and
thus are challenged to examine our own “Temple practices,” our own attachment
to the center of our Faith -- The Table of the Lord. The Altar is the Christian Temple.
We are
challenged in this Lenten season to ask ourselves if we have been faithful to
discipleship of the Lord Jesus or if we have fallen into a malaise of
half-hearted spiritual practices? Have
we polluted our Temple – our Church – by having forgotten reverence? Do we remember who we are, or do our
spiritual practices suggest we have forgotten?
At this
halfway point of the Lenten season, may we do a spiritual inventory of our
Lenten spiritual disciplines. We do this
inventory in the light of God’s unending love for us. Yes, the Lenten season invites to reflect on
who we are as the disciples of Jesus and the priority we place on who God is in
our lives. Pope Francis calls us out of
a life of spiritual indifference and seeks to immerse ourselves in the joy of
the Gospel. Why? God so loved the world that He sent His
only-begotten Son for our salvation.
What is
going to catch our attention? What is going to shake us out of the busyness of
life that keeps us from focusing on our relationship with God?
I can be
very successful in my career, in my business, but have I lost touch with my
soul in the process? My family may have
accomplished much in the way of achievements, but do we have time as a family
to pray together, simply to be with one another. The psalmist tells us: “Be still and know that I am God.” Are we too busy for any stillness in our lives?
As St. Paul
tells us in his Letter to the Ephesians, “God, who is rich in mercy, because of
his great love he had for us, even when we were dead in our transgressions,
brought us to life with Christ -- by grace you have been saved….For we are
God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus for the good works God has prepared in
advance, that we should live in them.”
St Paul was
vividly aware of grace in his own life.
He was in touch with his own conversion story. He wanted the Ephesians to also know in the
depths of their hearts that they were God’s handiwork.
In one way
or another, we all need to have the conversion experience of the apostle
Paul. Our experience probably won’t be
as dramatic as Paul’s, but we need to experience the love of God in our hearts.
As always,
Jesus, in the Gospel offers both comfort and challenge. Jesus said to Nicodemus: “Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the
desert, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, so that everyone who believes in
him may have eternal life.” The lifting
up signified not only crucifixion but also exaltation, more precisely, the
exaltation of us all to eternal life through Jesus’ death by crucifixion. Jesus transforms a sign of condemnation for
sin into an instrument of healing. The
cross is both a symbol of the suffering that is part of our spiritual journey,
but it is also the symbol of the love of Jesus that brings us eternal life.
What is the
cross but the revelation of a God loving enough to suffer death without
revenge, powerful enough to overcome death.
Jesus has come into the world to reveal our sins so that they
may be forgiven. As we live in the light
of Christ Jesus, we become more aware of what is not of God. In the light of God’s love, we all humbly, as
we do in the penitential rite and as we did in being marked with ashes at the
beginning of Lent, acknowledge that we are all sinners. There is no place for pride or arrogance or
judgmentalism in the spiritual life – we are all sinners.
On this Laetare Sunday, we make bold to rejoice that we are
loved and forgiven sinners. I leave with
a suggested mantra for the day: WE ARE
FORGIVEN. WE ARE NOT LUCKY. WE ARE
LOVED.
Have a blessed day.
No comments:
Post a Comment