Audio File
2nd Sunday of Lent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Here
we are starting the second week of Lent and Jesus is taking Peter,
James, and John up a mountain and transfiguring before them. Why? I
mean, we're fasting and praying and giving alms, preparing ourselves
for Easter, and we get the Gospel reading for the Transfiguration.
Shouldn't we be hearing something about sacrifice or persecution or
maybe even going out into the wilderness to be alone with God right
about now? Where's the encouragement to persevere in our Lenten
disciplines? Where's the exhortation to shed the Old Self in the
desert and put on Christ at Easter? Where're the warnings not to
succumb to the Devil's temptations? Yes, for the 2nd
Sunday of Lent, we get the gospel for the Transfiguration and the
story of Abraham and Isaac. Odd pairing. Unless you read them in
light of the Father keeping His promises to His people. And what
better encouragement can we get during Lent than two accounts of the
Father's kept promises? Two accounts of how it all ends for His
faithful? For his obedience, Abraham is given “descendants
as countless as the stars of the sky and the sands of the seashore,”
and the disciples are shown – in the transfigured Christ – what
the faithful will be after their death and resurrection: glorified by
God, utterly changed in His eternal presence. All in all, excellent
readings for Lent!
What
is the essential habit to practice to have a spiritually fruitful
Lent? I can think of several good candidates: perseverance,
fortitude, patience, hope. All of these require a certain amount of
self-control and the virtue of happy-waiting. Maybe: prudence,
selflessness, certainly humility. These bring us closer to God by
denying the Self what it thinks is its central place in the universe.
Also helpful: gratitude, surrender, and courage. All essential
elements in our striving to grow in holiness. All good answers. But I
think our OT and Gospel readings are pointing us toward a more
fundamental habit necessary for a productive Lent; namely, obedience.
Now, to most 21st
c. American ears obedience
sounds harsh, oppressive, freedom-denying, even fascistic. Robots and
slaves are obedient. Tyrants want obedient subjects. We've spent the
better part of the last 400 years in the West redefining concepts
like freedom, liberty, choice so that they mean precisely what we
need to mean. We've redefined obedience into an ugly external
imposition on our ability to choose whatever we want. Obedience
prevents us from becoming who we choose to be. With faith in God,
trusting absolutely in His promises, and working toward our
supernatural end with the HS – to be with Him eternally –
obedience is the key to flourishing in this Lenten desert.
Abraham
and Isaac go up Mt. Moriah. Jesus and the disciples go up Mt. Tabor.
God has ordered Abraham under obedience to sacrifice his only son,
Isaac. Jesus, soon to be sacrificed on the Cross in obedience to his
Father, reveals his glorified body to Peter, James, and John. Every
one of these men is moved to obey b/c of their trust in God's
promises. Abraham's obedience is rewarded with descendants as
numerous as the stars. The disciples are rewarded with a vision of
God's glory in heaven. Notice: they
obey w/o knowing that their obedience will be rewarded.
They freely choose to obey; that is, knowing that they each have a
purpose to fulfill, they each willingly move themselves toward the
Good, the Best for themselves – obeying God to be closer to God.
Their obedience requires a host of helping-virtues: courage,
patience, humility, surrender. But none of these will move them
closer to God than obedience. Why? B/c moving ourselves as God wills
requires us to trust Him, to hold firm in our hearts and minds that
He will not will anything directly harmful or hurtful for us. Even
though we cannot see the full consequences of our obedience to God's
will, we trust that He will make the best possible Good flourish from
our actions. We know that God is Love and that He wills only Love.
Knowing this, believing this, obeying His will for us can only
produce the love we need to thrive.
And
we need to thrive during these Lenten days. If we choose to see our
Lenten disciplines as movements toward God in trust, then how much
better will they be for our growth in holiness? Rather than seeing
fasting, prayer, and alms giving as punishments for sin or as
deprivations from good things, choose to see them as ways of showing
your trust in God's will for your good. We could spend days talking
about how each of these disciplines is good for us. But it is far
more productive to simply lay your trust on the altar and give it to
God; place your faith at His feet and place yourself in His hands.
This is not obedience out of fear. Obedience from coercion. Or
obedience for reward. This is listening closely to the Word.
Discerning your supernatural purpose in the Word. And moving your
body and soul toward the Best our Father has waiting for you. At the
end of Lent, obeying God as a loving son or daughter, you can emerge
unburdened, freer than you have ever been, cleansed of all
attachments, and struck in wonder at the freedom of it all. Easter is
the ultimate fulfillment of God's promises. Make your Lent a daily
exercise in obedience. Freely choose to take on His most holy will.
Follow
HancAquam or Subscribe ----->