My friends, as I said in this week’s bulletin, two lines, especially, stood out for me—the 1st from Ephesians, serving as our 2nd reading today, “We are God’s work of art, created in Christ Jesus to do the good things God created us to do…” The 2nd one from 2 Chronicles, our 1st reading today, comes from Cyrus, the leader of the Persians, who set the Israelites free after the Exile, with the words, “You can go home again.”
Now, it won’t be any surprise to you that I am suggesting that each of us go deeper with these two lines. For many of our combined years, “cradle-Catholics,” most of us, Lent has been a time, wherein we have nearly, “wallowed in,” “good ole Catholic guilt.” The 1st reading today from 2 Chronicles could add to the personal feelings that many of us may have had about our “worthlessness,” and feelings that we just can’t ever, “get it right”—mea culpa, mea culpa, striking our breasts, if it weren’t for the saving lines of Cyrus, that, “yes,” “we can go home again[!]”
Again, this is why I always say, “go deeper” to unearth the message our loving God wants us to get. Perhaps, we can look at this 1st reading as an “attention-getter” to simply realize that in our humanity, we are imperfect and make mistakes, for any number of reasons; we are tired, ill, upset, selfish, lazy—whatever it may be, but for me, the greater part of this reading (going deeper) is the message of hope that Cyrus not only gives to the People of God coming out of exile, but to us today, is that we too, “can go home again!”
John’s gospel selection for this Sunday lets us know, in Jesus’ words, that “God sent him into the world to save us,” (that good ole Catholic guilt) that I mentioned earlier, and told us that Jesus “needed” to die that horrible death on the cross, to save us as reparation for our sins. Think of how that paints God in most of our minds!
How about if we reframe this picture. If as we read in the letter to the Ephesians, “we are God’s work of art,” wouldn’t it make more sense to think that God wanted to give us, “a little bit extra help” in living out our imperfect human lives, by sending us, “a northern star,” so to speak, in our brother Jesus, to show us the way to be our best selves –as opposed to a vindictive God who “needed” someone to suffer for the imperfections of humanity?
I always have to wonder why our hierarchical Church fathers insist on holding up during Lent our “sinfulness” as opposed to our “merciful” God who “chases after us” all the days of our lives, as written so beautifully in the translation from The Message of the 23rd Psalm. The negative message does much to “enslave” us while the positive message is all about, “setting us free” to discover that indeed, “we are God’s work of art,” capable of so much good in our world.
And, as I look around our world, there seems to be so much that needs our love and care. Yes, we may be “imperfect” creatures, but we aren’t incapable of making a difference in our world. You all are aware that March is, Women’s History Month. February was, Black History Month. Have you ever thought why we have these two month-long celebrations? Or better yet, why we don’t have a Men’s History Month?
Racism and sexism are two of our national sins, and when you think about it, we are only touching the “tip of the iceberg” in month-long celebrations of the wonderful accomplishments over time, of both groups, often made little of, or nothing at all.
Friends, we live in a patriarchal world and Church, that second-guesses” the abilities of blacks and women that in the cases of whites and men, are uplifted. If we want to talk about “sin” in our Church, here is one, where women are concerned!
So much my friends that is labeled, “undoable” in our world and Church is not about an “inability” to do the thing that is needed, but about “power and control” –think about it!
Those with the power, for whatever reason, don’t want to share it, and how, we might ask, does that square with a God who created us, “works of art,” “to do the good things [that same God] “created us to do?”
In the beginning of this homily, I spoke about the negative notion that we have often gotten concerning Lent—heavy on “repenting.” It is good to consider that the word “return,” as in, “you can go home again,” and “repent” come from the same Greek word. Perhaps we might concentrate in these last weeks of Lent more on “returning” to our loving God, if by our actions, we have “been away,” knowing that “we will find mercy,” to begin once again, to be our best selves, and be “enabled” to do all that we were created to do. Amen? Amen!