Jl
2:12–18
Ps 51:3–4, 5–6ab, 12–13, 14, 17
2
Cor 5:20–6:2
Mt 6:1–6,
16–18
Christ the King
Catholic Church, Iowa Park
St. Paul Catholic
Church, Electra
St. Jude Thaddeus
Catholic Church, Burkburnett
Welcome to Lent! As
we all know very well, Lent is all about looking miserable to gain pity, resolving
to show up to Holy Mass ten minutes early (but not actually doing so), and
figuring out which fast food restaurant has the best fish sammich on Fridays,
right? No? Of course there is much more to Lent than all that. Ash Wednesday
begins a period of 40 days of “temporary inconvenience that leads us to
permanent improvement.” Lent involves asking the hard questions we all need
to hear and being receptive to the honest answers we all need to give.
St.
Paul reminds the Corinthians in our reading today that “we are all ambassadors for Christ.” Is he speaking about himself?
Yes, but he is also speaking about them
– the people of Corinth. And he is also speaking about us, the baptized faithful. St. Paul is reminding us that by virtue
of our baptism into Christ, we are all called to be his ambassadors in the
world. Our first hard question: What
does that mean – to be an ambassador of Christ? It means to speak in his name,
much as ambassadors of nations speak in the name of their heads of state. It
also means to be like Christ, to live like him, and to conform ourselves to him
so that the world can see Jesus Christ when they see us. Being an ambassador is
more than just a proclamation of words. Being an ambassador for Christ means to
take on the entirety of Christian
existence…both the joy of the Gospel
and the trial of the cross. This is
a hard answer to hear. Being a Christian is not easy…nor is it passive. We
are called to do battle against
spiritual evils.[1]
St. Paul tells us that God is making an appeal to us through him and that
appeal is for us to be reconciled to God through Jesus Christ. God is calling
us to himself! Therefore, we are to
be ambassadors of reconciliation to God through our words and our actions. The
Catechism teaches us indeed that “the whole
Church should be the sign and instrument of the forgiveness and reconciliation
he acquired for us at the price of his blood.” (CCC 1442)
What
does it mean to be reconciled to God and why
do we need it? That is another hard
question because to ask it is to recognize
and admit that it is not God who
needs to be reconciled to us, but it is we who need to be reconciled to God.
Reconciliation is the ending of conflict, discord, and hostility between two
parties. Of course, we know God does not oppose us or turn his back on us. He
longs for us to love him and be with him forever. It is we who are unfaithful. We
turn our back on him when we choose to sin. We come into conflict with God when we refuse to assent to the teachings of his holy bride, the Catholic Church.
It is indeed we who need
reconciliation and the unearned gift of God’s mercy. When we repent and believe
in the Gospel; when we accept God’s mercy and love in our own lives, only then can
we become the ambassadors of that same grace and love to others. Like all of
the gifts God bestows on us, his gift of reconciliation is a gift given to be
shared. But the hard reality of
reconciliation is that we cannot give to others what we do not possess. To
become the righteousness of God that St. Paul exhorts us to today; to be able
to offer ourselves in self-giving love in the lives of our fellow men and
women, we have to be reconciled to God first.
St.
Paul speaks to heart of the matter. He begs us not to receive the freely-given grace of God in vain. Ash Wednesday
marks the beginning of Lent and it is the time for each of us to make a
decision. And so more hard questions:
Will we use this 40 days to deepen our relationship with Christ and be
reconciled with him as his coworker in the Kingdom of God? Will we use this
time of Lent to purify our bodies, our minds, our lives, and reject partnering
with evil? The hard answers: If we
choose not to take advantage of this
Holy Lent, this 40 days of prayer, fasting, and penance, then we risk receiving
the grace of God in vain. If we treat our fasting and penance as checkboxes to
show off like the hypocrites in today’s Gospel instead of using them to draw
near to Christ Jesus, then we risk receiving the grace of God in vain. We risk
God’s grace being ineffective in us and not
making a lasting change. God’s merciful love is always being showered down upon us, but we are not always open to
it. It is as if we had an umbrella of sin and pride and worldly materialism
over us, shielding us from that downpour of grace. We have to actively choose to cooperate with God. He waits
for our decision. Jesus already accomplished the hard work through his suffering and death on the cross. Now it is our turn to act.
We,
being very human, like to put things off until tomorrow, especially if they are
hard; especially if they require us to humble ourselves before our God. Today is the day to ask the hard
questions and start to give honest answers. Today begins our Lenten journey of
prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Let today begin a period of 40 days of “temporary
inconvenience that leads us to permanent improvement.” As St. Paul reminds
us: “Behold, now is a very
acceptable time; behold now is the
day of salvation” (2 Cor 6:2).
St. Joseph, Protector of the Holy
Church, Pray for Us!
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