Sunday, March 26, 2023

Homily for Fifth Sunday of Lent - Year A

The readings for Fifth Sunday of Lent may be found at:  


https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/032623.cfm



This week, St. John tells us about one of Jesus’ most outstanding miracles.  


Raising Lazarus from the dead.


And this powerful scene 


reveals to us not only how deep Jesus’ love is for His friends, 


but also proves his divinity, in his power over death itself.


Now, chances are we’ve all lost someone dear to us.


We can imagine the grief and sorrow that Lazarus’ sisters, 


Mary and Martha, must have felt 


as they watched his illness get worse 


and as they watched their beloved brother die.


Many of us have felt that kind of pain before.  


It can really wound us, 


sometimes break us. 


Feeling helpless,  emotional, 


filled with sorrow, like something is missing.  


Asking why this had to happen.


Questioning God.


We’ve all likely felt that way, haven’t we?


Now, Mary and Martha, 


along with their brother, were close friends of Jesus.


And as his friends, 


they probably knew that he had the power to heal the sick.  


They probably even knew he had the ability to raise the dead.


How much harder must it have been for them.  


Losing their brother, 


knowing someone they knew well, 


could have made it all right - all better 


and that, that person was not there when they needed him the most.


When Jesus arrived four days after Lazarus had been placed in the tomb, 


we can imagine what the body must have been like.  


What the smell of death must have been like.


And when Jesus got there, 


both sisters expressed their disappointment and confusion to Him.


Why hadn’t Jesus arrived sooner?


Why hadn’t he been there to cure their brother?


Why had He let him die?


Instead, he was off somewhere else and did nothing to help them.


If we are honest, we are not so different from Mary and Martha.


When something really goes wrong in our lives, when something bad happens, 


when someone gets really sick 


or we lose someone that we love, 


we often question Jesus and wonder where He was when it happened, 


why He wasn’t here to make it all better.


But Jesus knew that Lazarus' death was not the end of the story. 


He knew that His Father had given Him the power to give life, 


even to those who had already passed away. 


And so, with great compassion and love, 


Jesus called out to Lazarus' tomb and commanded in a loud voice, 


“Lazarus come out.”


And to the amazement of all who were there, 


the dead man came out from the tomb, 


hands and feet bound in bandages 


and his face wrapped in a cloth, 


to which Jesus commanded, “Unbind him and let him go.”


Fully alive and fully restored to his family and friends.


What a powerful reminder this is of Jesus' power over death and His love for us! 


Just as He raised Lazarus from the dead, 


so too can He bring new life to our own souls. 


He is the resurrection and the life, 


and those who believe in Him will never die.


But this story is not just about Jesus' power over death. 


It is also about His compassion and love for His friends. 


And we are all meant to be His friends.


Jesus wept with Mary and Martha when He saw their grief and sorrow.  


We sometimes forget that Jesus was human.  


He felt emotions.  He felt pain.  He felt hunger and thirst.  


He loved. He felt grief and sorrow.   He wept real human tears.


He shared in their pain and suffering, 


even though He knew that He was about to perform a great miracle.


And so, we too can take great comfort in knowing that Jesus is with us


In our own times of grief and sorrow. 


He knows how we feel.


He weeps with us and shares in our pain, 


offering us His love and compassion to help us as we struggle.


Let us take heart in the miracle of Lazarus' resurrection 


and the love that Jesus showed to His friends. 


Let us have faith in His power to bring new life to our own souls, 


and trust in His compassion and love to sustain us in our times of need. 


May we always remember 


that He is the resurrection and the life, 


and that those who believe in Him, 


his friends - that we are called to be, 


will never die. 


Saturday, March 11, 2023

Homily for Third Sunday of Lent - Year A


The readings for Third Sunday or Lent may be found at:  


https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/031223.cfm



Is anyone thirsty?


I am, and not just from today’s lengthy gospel reading!


The readings this week have me thinking about water.


Sparkling, bottled, distilled, tap, tonic, drinking, mineral, smart.  


You can probably think of more.


Water from the rock of Horeb in our first reading from Exodus. 


The love of God being poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, like water in our second reading from St. Paul.


And St. John’s retelling of the Samaritan woman at the well who Jesus speaks to about living water.


This well is notable, not because it’s been around for four thousand years and still exists today, but because Jesus’ talk with the Samaritan woman happened there.


As we know, Jesus was a Jew.  Jews didn’t talk to Samaritans.  


Jews considered them unclean. In the social order, Samaritans were no better than street dogs.


At that time, Jewish men also didn’t speak publicly with women.


So Jesus crossed gender and racial lines to talk to her.


It might surprise you to realize we have a lot in common with this woman.


In today’s world, isn’t it all the more amazing that Jesus wants to talk to us, to love us?  


As compared to Him, aren’t we all unclean?


Yet, He desperately wants us to be in more intimate relationship with Him.


But we get in the way.


We know our faults, we hide them and the devil does his part to convince us we are beyond hope and to focus on our shame.


To keep us separated from God.


But, here’s a little secret.


Jesus knows us better than we do.  


Like this woman at the well, we need to talk to Jesus.


And not just by repeating the same prayers robotically like we’ve been doing since we were eight.


We need to find a quiet place, everyday, to reflect on Him and to talk to Him about our day or whatever.


We must develop a closer, more intimate relationship with Him.


It takes very little effort, really.  


And if we think we don’t have the time in our busy lives to do this, we need even more to make this time!


Like the Samaritan woman, we need to talk to Jesus.


So then Jesus asks about her husband, though he knows her history without even having to ask.


With one question he exposes her sin. 


And that can be unsettling, because we all have sins.


This woman has led an immoral life.


But when asked, she’s honest. 


She doesn’t try to hide it. 


And that’s a critical step in finding living water for our thirsty soul. 


We must regularly do an honest examination of conscience and make a good sacramental confession. 


There’s nothing to be afraid of.


Notice that Jesus doesn’t shake his finger in her face and give her a lecture on what an evil person she is.  


In confession, a priest, acting in persona Christi won’t either.


Instead, Jesus brags on her for telling the truth. 


If there is one thing I want us to take away today, it’s this.


Make a good sacramental confession.


It exists not to dwell on the bad, but to enhance the good in us. 


Its purpose is to elevate, not pull us down. 


To give living water.


This living water represents grace, the reality of divine life and love within each of us. 


To get that living water we need to recognize our soul is thirsty and recognize Jesus is our way to quench that thirst.


We can’t go into surgery if we’re dirty.  


We can’t wear all white with mud on our hands.  


We also can’t get closer to Jesus if we’re not in right relationship with Him by confessing our sins and receiving absolution in the sacrament of confession.


In the process, receiving God’s sanctifying grace, living water.


No sinner is exempt from God’s grace and we are all sinners.


Living water.  Drink from it and don’t thirst. 


Drink from it and its grace will change our life and the world around us.


Is anyone thirsty?


In the name of Jesus, 


Drink living water and live… really live.