Homily – 1st Sunday of Lent

My friends, Lent is upon us once again, and for some, that may be a negative thing, while others may feel more positive about these 40 days.  Robert usually remembers each year his childhood and of having to pray the rosary each night and of the long church services, especially during Holy Week, and also, the joy he felt when on Good Friday, everyone would get up to venerate the cross—a little movement to get a break in the “endless” prayers, that for a child were hard to take. 

   So, today, I’d like to look a bit then through the chosen readings at just what our humanity calls us to during these 40 days, and perhaps in a more positive way.  The gospel today from Luke shows us the devil tempting our brother Jesus directly through his humanity—in the ways that we are all, at times, tempted.  Jesus has gone into the hills to be alone and prepare for the start of his public ministry through prayer and fasting.  Thus, the devil tempts him with physical food.  Next Jesus is tempted with power – to control everything – to be in charge if only he will bow down before the devil.  And finally, when neither of these work on Jesus – the devil’s temptation hits at his divinity – his indestructibleness. 

   With each temptation – Jesus goes to Scripture to justify his response to the devil.  “Not on bread alone will we live.”  “You will do homage to God alone.”  “You will not put the Most High to the test.”  We should not miss my friends, Jesus’ actions in each of these three temptations – he goes to Scripture to find his way forward.  The lesson for us is to always, “follow in Jesus’ footsteps.”

   Additionally, I think we do well to “study” how Jesus lives out his humanity, to then respond in like manner.  In other words, we need to let Jesus “be human” – otherwise we will miss the great gift that our God gave us in “risking,” as John Shea says in his beautiful Creed that we use here at All Are One, that the Godself would become human.

   Now, some might say that the Godself is perfect, so how then can he/she be capable of “risking?” Without knowing what the theologian/storyteller, John Shea might have been thinking, I can only surmise that he wants us to get away from the merely, “black and white” images that we may have been living with to understand in a greater way just how much we are loved by the Godself, to use Shea’s term for God.

   Just think my friends, that our God loved us enough to for a time dispense with the powers of divinity (all perfect-ness – no flaws) “risking” Jesus, begotten of God to come among us, completely human with all that it implies. 

   Paul’s 2nd chapter of the letter to the Philippians, that we will use later in Lent, speaks so well to this idea: “His state was divine, yet he did not cling to it, but became human…and was humbled” …as we are.

   I believe we have all experienced a time in our lives, when we loved someone fully with our hearts and minds, and this could be with a mate, a sibling, or a friend, and that love wasn’t returned, or perhaps not in the same way.  We “risked” loving another, became vulnerable before that love – only to not have it be returned, or perhaps abused. 

   Unless we can allow Jesus to be completely human and risk loving all of us, even if rejected by some, then I submit, he can’t really be of much help to us in our journeys to God.  I think this may be what Shea is saying in his Creed, and again, not knowing for sure.

   Before Jesus entered Jerusalem for the last time, Scripture tells us that he “wept over” [the city] – a purely human act from a human/God who “risked” everything, only to be misunderstood in the end.  We can each turn to our human brother Jesus with all that troubles us in our human journeys because he lived it too, and knows the pain of loss, rejection, of not being good enough for some, of being misunderstood and taken for granted.

   I have spent time today, my friends, during this homily lifting up with you the possibility of God “risking” in sending Jesus because over the years, using this Creed, some have found the word, “risking” both interesting and for some, unbelievable.  I believe if we can allow God to so, be, one-with-us, and believe that God would fully immerse into humanity, right down to our weakness, then our God becomes so much more interesting, full, and thus, loveable.  To me, it is in the act of “risking” that I can see how truly God’s love is over-the-top!

   Now we might wonder why for so many, many years of Church history, we were taught that Jesus came to save us from our sins, instead of, as John Shea seems to suggest in his beautiful Creed, that it was really because of love for us, to show us how to navigate the ups and downs of being human, to be completely human as we are, in order to show us how to do it ourselves. I think our Church history gives us such an unloving view of our good God, because they just couldn’t believe that God would love us that much. 

   So, during Lent, my friends, I would invite each of us to take this, perhaps new concept, that of God “risking” in Jesus, “to the basement of our hearts” and see what we might discover there.  I have shared in the past a piece by Hospice chaplain, Janet Harney, entitled The Basement of my Heart, and have left some copies on the back table for your reflection.  As you know, I often suggest taking things to our hearts when trying to decide the best way to go.  Besides looking at new concepts, we might find, as the article suggests, there are other things that can be addressed, “in the basement of our hearts” with our God who is waiting there for us, and that Lent is a good time to do this.  As Moses suggests in the 1st reading from Deuteronomy to the People of God, a good response to this God of ours, for always being there for us, is, “gratitude.” 

   In conclusion then my friends, from the time we may choose to spend, “in the basement of our hearts,” we may find a “renewed faith” as Paul speaks of it to the Romans in today’s 2nd reading, which will give us the strength to move forward in our world that so needs true followers of Jesus to respond, “with justice toward all.  And also, let us be fortified that all we do for good in our world, we do not do alone — as we sang the beautiful psalmist’s words today, “Be with me God when I am in trouble,” and we know that God is indeed there. Amen? Amen!