2nd
Sunday of Lent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Albert the Great,
Irving
God
tells Abraham to sacrifice Isaac. Abraham goes up the mountain and
begins the sacrifice. He's willingly, obediently about to kill his
only son b/c God has ordered him to do so. We can stop here and ask:
does Abraham love God more than he loves Isaac? No, he
doesn't. But his obedience to God shows that he loves God first;
he loves God before he loves Isaac, therefore, Abraham loves Isaac
b/c he loves God first. At the very last second, an angel stays
Abraham's knife and God provides a substitute sacrifice in the form
of a ram. What we love most can only be loved through the love God
has for us b/c He is love itself. That God loves us is never in
question. He is love. Love is who He is and what He does. No
question. But there is a question about God and love that we must
ask, and ask daily: do I love God? If so, what purpose does my
love for God serve? On Mt. Tabor – in the presence of Peter, James,
and John – the transfigured Christ tells us why we love. We love
God for the same reason He loves us: so that we may be made holy.
And in holiness we live out sacrificial love.
So,
how do we help God make us holy? That is, what do we
do/think/say/feel on a day to day basis that assists God's love for
us so that we are actually growing in holiness? Loving God, yourself,
your family and friends, your neighbors, and even loving your enemies
is easy in the abstract. It is far more difficult to get out there
and perform loving acts; to perform forgiveness; to show mercy; to
treat everyone you meet – at church, at the bank, at the office, in
traffic – to treat everyone you meet as another soul deeply in love
with God and eternally loved by God. This is why the Church has
always bound faith and works together: our loving works demonstrate
our trust in God and our trust in God is made real in our loving
works. When we fail to love, we confess these failures as sins in
thought, word, and deed. So, how do we help God make us holy?
Well, first, we understand that loving God and those He
loves is not simply an abstract, intellectual exercise; next,
we understand that love is a behavior – like driving or walking or
getting dressed. To love is to see, hear, think about, and treat
yourself and everyone else the way God Himself treats us all. With
kindness, compassion, dignity, patience, and forgiveness. Do this and
you grow in holiness. You become more like Christ – set apart. You
are transfigured.
Becoming
more like Christ is we have vowed to do. But we need to hear this:
loving God, self, and everyone else – becoming more like Christ –
is dangerous. Dangerous how? Besides Jesus' promises of persecution,
trial, and death for those who follow him, we can point to the forty
days he spent in the desert being tempted by Satan. We too are
tempted to play the Devil's Games with sin and death. The Devil
always takes God's gifts and tweaks them ever-so-slightly and then
presents them to us infected with his poison. God's love and His
command to us to love is no different. With God's love and His
command to love comes His truth and His command to obey the
truth. Love and truth cannot be separated. When we love
intensely, we dwell intensely in the truth. And when we tell the
Truth we always express love. The Devil plays on our desire to love
by pointing out all the ways we appear to fail at love. He accuses
the Church of not loving women b/c we truthfully name artificial
contraception, abortion, and sterilization evil. He
accuses us of hatred b/c we truthfully call sex outside of a
sacramental marriage evil. He accuses us of not loving
orphans b/c we cannot place them in homes with two fathers or two
mothers. He accuses us of not loving non-Christians b/c we truthfully
teach that Christ is the only name under heaven through which all are
saved. What Satan is tempting us to do, want us to do, is sever
truth from love and then love without truth. This we cannot do
b/c our Christ is the way, the truth, and the life. We follow him so
that we may be transfigured.
Satan
and the world he rules teaches that “Love” is to be practiced
without Truth. Love w/o truth is nothing more than tolerance or
indifference, an emotion that feels good to emote but ultimately
leaves those who live it living a lie. Godly love is always true.
Never a lie. True love is always gives the glory to God. Never to
man. Love always carries us to goodness; never to evil. Love always
binds us in obedience; it never frees us to be disobedient. Godly
love always heals, always cleans, sometimes hurts,
sometimes cuts away. Love never winks at sin, shrugs at injustice, or
ignores the poor. Love always looks to Christ, his church, and his
Mother. Love never uses the bottom-line, the convenient, the
practical, or the efficient to destroy God’s creatures, especially
His unborn children. Love always encourages spiritual growth from
faithful experience. Love never gives license to novelty for
novelty’s sake nor does love trust innovation for the sake of
excitement. Love can be a terrible whirlwind, a bone-shattering blow,
a heart-ripping loss. But love always builds up in perfection, grows
in wisdom and kindness; love attracts questions about eternal things,
and discourages attachment to impermanent things. The love that Satan
and the world he rules wants to settle for is a passion for
indifference, permissiveness, choice w/o consequence, and,
ultimately, death.
Will
you be made holy? Let's ask that differently: do you will to
be made holy? If you will to become a transfigured instrument for
God’s Word, you will love as He loves you. You will speak the truth
and only the truth; you will spread goodness and only goodness; you
will honor beauty and only beauty; you will correct error, confront
sin, expose lies, forgive all offenses; and you will build up his
Body with works of mercy and open the doors of your faith to the
stranger. And you will remember – if you will to be made holy –
that you are not alone. God is with us, and who can stand against
Him?