HOMILY FOR FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT, YEAR B. LAETARE SUNDAY. 14.03.2021.
Readings: 2 Chronicles 36:14-16.19-23;
Psalm 137; Ephesians 2:4-10 and John 3:14-21. CAN WE Rejoice
BOLDLY PRAY WITH TODAY’S PSALM? “IF I FORGET YOU JERUSALEM, LET MY RIGHT HAND WITHER?”
The entrance
antiphon goes thus: “Rejoice, Jerusalem,
and all who love her. Be joyful, all who were in mourning; exult and be
satisfied at her consoling breast.” In a contrast tone, the Psalmist says,
“If I forget you Jerusalem, let my right hand wither! O let my tongue cleave to
my palate (mouth) if I remember you not…” (Ps 137:5-6); this brings to mind two
phases of today’s liturgy, the wrath and compassion of God shown in the exile
and the liberation of his people. With this, the Laetare Sunday sets the tone of a joyful anticipation of our
salvation with a call to rejoice.
The wrath and
compassion of God are evident in the first reading. The reading identifies three elements that brought down God’s judgment
of the Israelites. They were unfaithful; they defiled the temple and laughed at
the prophets. God, great in mercy to
his people, sent warnings but these warnings were rejected. These warnings were
expressions of his love and mercy inviting this sinful city and people return
to him but they consistently and persistently remained in their sins till they
experienced the wrath of God. Having rejected his message and the
messengers of his compassion, God turned Judah over to a leader and a people
who had no compassion upon their people and there arose the destruction of the
city of Jerusalem. Those who escaped the sword were carried away to Babylon
where they became servants to the King of Chaldean until the establishment of
the kingdom of Persia, an expression of God’s compassion that his people return
home.
While in
captivity, they sat and wept by the rivers of Babylon. They wept when they
remembered they were not home anymore. As they remembered Zion, they wept. They
wept over the death of so many loved ones; they wept over the loss of almost
everything they owned; they wept over the destroyed city of Jerusalem and its
temple. They wept over the agony of a forced march from Judea to Babylon; they
wept over the cruelty of their captors; they wept over the loss of such a
pleasant and blessed past; they wept because of the uncertainty of their
future; finally, they wept over their
sins, their rebellious and hardened hearts that has invited such judgment from
God. While in this mournful state, remembering their past, their captors
requested they sing one of Zion’s song for their amusement, the song simply
wasn’t there. Their songs were composed
out of personal relationship with God and to sing it for their captors would
have been a play of traitorism to their own lost city and to God. Still in
their mournful state, they vowed not to forget Jerusalem saying, “If I forget you Jerusalem, let my right hand
wither! O let my tongue cleave to my mouth if I remember you not.” Can we because of present challenges forget
the wonders the Lord has done for us? Can we be bold enough to remember God in
difficult moments like the singer of the psalm?
Williams
Shakespeare tells us, “If music is the food of the soul, play more that I may
have a full of it.” The song of the psalmist is so beautiful that it revives a
troubled heart and gives joy to God’s people. This joy is better expressed in
the Gospel as God has given to us the best gift gratuitously, the gift of his
only begotten Son. The Gospel contains one of the most famous verses in the
Bible, “For God so loved the world that
he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish
but have eternal life. For God sent the Son not to condemn the world, but that
the world might be saved through him.” In the first reading, we notice
God’s gift of salvation through his message and his messengers of compassion.
In the Gospel, we notice God’s love and compassion extends not only to the
Jewish people but also to the whole world, for he did not wait for the world to
turn to him before he loved the world, he loved and gave his only begotten Son
to the world when it was still the ‘sinful’ world.
Importantly, the
reading describes the recipients of God’s love. We may not benefit from the
love of God if we do not believe in Christ, for whoever believes in him will
not perish but have everlasting life. Belief
in Christ means much more than intellectual awareness or agreement. It means to
trust, rely and cling to Christ. He who believes in Christ is not condemned,
but he, who deliberately reject or refuse to believe in Christ, is condemned
already, just like the Israelites who persistently refused the message and the
messenger of God in the first reading. This is because men love darkness
rather than light, because their deeds were evil. To love darkness is to be comfortable remaining in sin and to refuse
the mercy of God offered to us. In view of this, I recall one of the adages
of my Novice Master, “He who refuse to enter the ship should not say there is
no space.” However, where sin
abound, grace abound the more.
In light of
this, that St. Paul in the second reading tells us, “God who is rich in mercy, out of his great love with which he loved us,
even when we were dead through our trespasses, we were saved by grace.”
This is an expression of God’s love, compassion and mercy in reconciling man to
himself, also highlighting the grace of God in action. God loved us even when
we were dead in trespasses, unable to save ourselves nor justify ourselves. At
this point, he expressed his love so much to us that he had to share in our
death so that we can rise to eternal life with him.
Dear friends in
Christ, the Laetare Sunday calls us to rejoice at this unmerited grace given to
us in Christ Jesus, rooted in the love and mercy of a compassionate Father. We are saved by grace and it is not by our
making but a gift from God. God will never stop dealing with us on the basis of
grace, and will forever continue to unfold his riches to us through eternity. God
is so rich in grace that all the demands that can ever be made on the grace of
God will never impoverish him, or even diminish his store of mercy. May the
grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God and the communion of the Holy
Spirit be with you all. Amen! Peace be with you.
Happy Sunday!
Fr. Ken Dogbo,
OSJ
Amen... and with your spirit.
ReplyDeleteAnd with ur spirit Amen
ReplyDelete