08 March, 2014

First Sunday of Lent A - 9 March 2014 José Galarreta S.J. c/o Vally D'Souza sj

 First Sunday of Lent A  - 9 March 2014

José Galarreta S.J.
The liturgical year is developed in three years. There is an Ordinary Time, the normal Sundays of the year, which can be up to thirty three. And two special cycles – usually called “the heavy seasons”  which are the Christmas Season and the Easter Season.

   We have just finished celebrating the Christmas season. Now, after a few intervening Sundays taken from the Ordinary Time, we enter the Paschal Season. Basically, we are always celebrating the same thing, God the Savior with us, but during Easter, we enter more deeply into the human and into the divine. The human is seen from its more disturbing dimension:”man is a sinner”. And  God seen from his most hopeful dimension: “made sin for us, obedient unto death of the cross: died, risen, and triumphant at the right hand of the Father.”

   This teaches us once more, what God is like and what the human being is like. We not only discover the love of God, the Savior, but also the possibilities and the destiny of man. Just as Jesus did, we go through the cross to the resurrection, from death to life.

The Season of Lent


The two ‘heavy’ seasons are preceded by four or five weeks of preparation. Advent prepares the Nativity with a basic theme: prepare the way of the Lord who is coming. Lent prepares Easter by symbolizing human life: we come from sin, pain, and the encounter with God fully. It is very important to situate ourselves well: it is not a matter of a season in which, so that God forgives us, we devote ourselves to do penance for sins which we do not do the rest of the year. We are dealing with a season in which we remember more intensely a fundamental constituent of human life: to accept a Savior God, to emerge from darkness and death to meet with the light and life manifested in Jesus. 

Neither do we do penance to obtain God’s forgiveness. It seems as if we were to buy the forgiveness of God, and that’s not true. God always forgives us, loves us, calls us. Neither is it a time of sadness; on the contrary, it is a time of celebration and being energized: we celebrate the fact that life is a meaningful struggle. We celebrate the fact the struggle , the overcoming of sin, is the work of God for us, and has a glorious end. We celebrate the fact that even though we commit errors, God is there to make up for them. And we celebrate all this looking up to Jesus, who had a life of difficulties and darkness like all of us, who died a disgraceful death because he was faithful to God, and who is alive and triumphant because he has reached the height, the first of all of us, the one who shows us that victory is possible.

   Five weeks, forty days till Easter. For forty years the Israelites journeyed through the desert: they were coming out of slavery, the Lord was leading them in the form of a column of light, the Lord went with them in the Tent, fed them with manna. They were going towards the Land, the fatherland. What a marvelous image of human life, full of trust in God, guide and strength for the way to the Fatherland!

   Who is it that has robbed us of the happiness of Advent and Lent? Who has reduced the message to penance before a God sitting in judgment? Why have we forgotten that what we celebrate is “GOD the LIBERATOR”? Who is it that has been left with only ashes and has forgotten that it is God who gives life to ashes? 

THEMES


THE TEXT OF GENESIS

It is a summary of parts taken from Chapters 2 & 3. Its author (whom we call the “Yahwehist” because he calls God Yahweh) is taken up with the task of the creation of man and of his condition on earth. He sees that there is suffering and laborious work for the   human being. He sees, above all,  that there is a dangerous tendency to evil, to believe they are gods, to enjoy what they like against the law of God. And he builds up this precious story to express all this: his message is magnificent:

God has created the human being. The human being is a living element of the earth, like all others, but God has put in him his spirit, and has given him laws so he lives. The human being despises those laws, believing himself to be wiser than God, and thence come all his problems.

   Of course, this is the account of something that happened. Historically this is not how human life began, neither was there ever a Garden of Eden. It’s a story invented by the Yahwehist author to send us this magnificent message. The author isn’t interested in knowing out of scientific curiosity what happened a million years ago. He is interested in knowing what a human being is, and he expresses with this story, something fundamental about his faith: with God you have light and order; without God, chaos and misfortune. This will be one of the most important lines of argument of the whole book of Genesis and even of the whole Bible. 

 The Letter to the Romans 

Paul makes use of the text of Genesis and develops it. He accepts the symbol of Adam,the first man, and presents Jesus as the “new Adam”. From Jesus we receive new life, the life of sons. Adam symbolizes man subject to sin. Jesus is man, Son of God, who triumphs over sin. Through him, through Jesus, we can all be sons, conquer temptation, enter the Kingdom.

But this text is obscure. It seems to indicate that Paul was using the story of Genesis, taking it to be historical, or applying it as such. In short, it creates more problems than it solves. I suggest changing it for Romans 7,5.


THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW

The story contains much symbolism. It is possible that Jesus would retire, on this occasion and in many others, to the desert, to fast and pray. It was a habitual practice; it was so among Christians throughout history, and it continues to be so. The text shows us also that Jesus suffered temptations in his life; this confirmation of  the temptations of Jesus is very important to know him, and to build a proper Christology, in which the humanity may not seem a mere appearance.
   The story of the temptation is evidently “staged”. The most profound temptations of Jesus are presented in a single  story, the ones which he undoubtedly suffered in his spirit during his whole life. Jesus was tempted like any human being,  as was symbolized in the story of Genesis. Temptations to power, to use the Word for his own advantage, to serve the powers of the world... Jesus shows himself as the conqueror of temptation, able to conquer it to follow the Word and serve God alone.

   We are overwhelmed by the human reality of Jesus. He needs to pray , experiences temptations... This trend will culminate in various stories in which Jesus “retires to pray” or “spends almost entire nights in prayer”, and, of course, in the garden of Olives and in the vocal prayer with which he fights his abandonment on the cross.

   A significant fact: neither the temptations in the desert nor the anguish in Gethsemane are mentioned in the fourth Gospel. It would seem that in such circumstances Jesus would appear “too human” for the author.

   During forty days we portray the life and we illustrate it with the Word. Forty is the biblical number for human existence (400 years in Egypt, 40 years in the desert, forty days Elias spent on the road to Horeb...) It represents “a “provisional time”; this is only a way; on the way is the cross. On the horizon is the Resurrection, the Ascension, the freedom, the fullness.

   The first theme of our Lenten meditation is our human condition. We are sinners. At times we simplify this concept giving it the meaning of “we are guilty of disobeying God”. The meaning is more profound. Our condition of sinners means above all that we do not know to distinguish what is good for us, and that we feel strongly attracted to things which seem good to us but which spoil us. All this is included in the concept of  “temptation” .

The first temptation is to consider ourselves “gods”. Immediately after comes the second temptation: to live to satisfy our likings, to pay attention to only what we like. In this way, we make this life our final destination: making this life the most agreeable possible. Then we turn to  God to help us to make this so. And since God does not help us in this, we think “God does not hear us, God does not help me... there is no God.” The greatest temptation.
   It’s wonderful the way the author of Genesis represents all this. He has invented a story in which we feel ourselves portrayed. The irresistible attraction for what is forbidden, the suspicion that although forbidden it is not bad, to prefer what I think and feel to the Word of God... The author of Genesis is a wonderful writer; he knows how to create images that describe us perfectly; he is also a profound theologian. He has been able to give  a body to our condition as sinners.

   Quite often we have diminished these ideas and these stories by giving them a historico-juridical dimension. There was a first man, a first couple, who disobeyed God. Juridical dimension: God punished them, and now all of us their descendants  are paying the consequences. In short: our parents lost their riches and we are born disinherited. It is a sad caricature of the human condition. Our “original” sin does not lie in its historical origin. We call our human condition original sin, drawn by what does not suit us and deceived as to good and evil, which is the origin, the source of all our errors, of all our sins. The story of Genesis does not relate what happened, but represents the way we are, the most profound and obscure aspect of our human condition.

   And the Gospel shows that Jesus is one of us: subject to temptation, attracted by apparently good things. Jesus had many other temptations, and they appear in the Gospels. The most terrible one was, doubtless, the one of Holy Thursday, when he felt himself abandoned by his Father, the most bitter of all the temptations of the human being: “Are you there? Is it true there is a Father who takes care of my life? Is it true that all this makes sense?”

Jesus can conquer temptation. From “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?”, Jesus can pass over to “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.” He does so after a long period of prayer, of vocal prayer reciting psalm 22. God has not freed him from death, he has not taken away from him the  chalice of the Passion. But he has given him the strength and the light to carry the cross and to die.
 Jesus does not conquer death by escaping from it. Jesus does not use his powers to live well and escape daily life. Jesus makes of his life and his death a triumph of the Spirit, that is, Jesus conquers temptation, lives like a new man. Jesus, a man like us, but “a man full of the Spirit”. The power of the Spirit makes him truly man, a man as he ought to be. That is, that in Jesus we see the complete human situation : the human being burdened with weaknesses and obscurities... and full of the power of God which makes him conquer all that to fulfill the plan of God, which is liberation. Jesus is also a pilgrim and experiences the seductions and the terrors of the road. But the Spirit of God is with him.

A Christology “from above” would read this like Paul: he stripped himself of the divinity” (Philippians 2,7). “Made himself sin for us.” (2 Cor. 5.21).

The incarnation is not to be taken lightly: love is a force that tends to identify those who love each other. That is why the love of God makes him man, truly man, who assumes the human condition totally.

A Christology “from below” would read this like the Synoptics or the Acts: “who is this?” (Mt 8,28) Jesus of Nazareth was a man accredited by God to you ... handed over...   whom you have put to death ...God raised him from the dead and has received from the Father the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2,22...).

All this is presented well in the fragment of Paul. Everything is symbolic in the language of Paul. The kingdom of sin leads to death. The son of Adam is “the old man”, deceived and spoilt. Jesus is the First Born, the first of the “new Men”, who build their lives attentive to the Word, conquering temptation, overcoming sin that tries to seduce them. The language of Paul is very juridical, and seems to understand the story of Genesis as history. It is not true. Within it we ought to learn to understand the profound message. The relation of man with God cannot be reduced to a juridical plane of guilt-satisfaction-pardon. It is far more profound.
   So then, we have begun Lent with a consideration about our human condition as sinners. And we have been sent a most important first message: “sinners” does not mean “guilty”. It means we have to seek our life, and we are in danger of being mistaken, through error and because the deceits of the road attract us. The Word of God is profound when it defines the human being.

   The concept of sin is much more profound than the concept of “disobedience”. When God presents himself as Savior, Liberator, he does not present himself simply as a bland judge, but as Light so that we do not get lost, Bread and Water to journey with strength, Shepherd who leads the flock to good pastures, Doctor who heals when we fall sick, or are wounded as we journey... And all these images are far more profound and speak of the human being much better than our concepts of “guilt”. “redemption”,  “pardon”, which fall far short of and belittle the human being and his relationship with God.


FOR OUR PRAYER

1.     Allow yourself to be carried away by admiration. How magnificent is the author of Genesis, who knows the human being so well, and how well he speaks of God!  Two thousand nine hundred years ago, a man knew more about the human being and  sin than us. In his words we feel the Presence of the Spirit of God, we feel God speaking to us. Experience the Word in the very ancient texts and give thanks to God.

2.     CONTEMPLATION 

Contemplate Jesus on the pinnacle of the Temple, in the highest tower. Before the eyes of his imagination appears all the attraction of the world: kingdoms, power, pleasures, popularity, fame, glory. For a while feel the attraction of the “world”.

Contemplate Jesus: he smiles, he sees that all this is purely appearance. He does not allow himself to be deceived. And he descends from the Temple, and begins to journey along the roads preaching and healing. He has chosen well. Make an act of trust in him. Jesus knows how to live, Jesus knows how to overcome temptation, the very temptations that can spoil my life.

3.     CONSIDERATIONS

It is possible that many things bother and worry us. We have fears, doubts... Bring them to the Father, one by one, in a spirit of sonship.. WE are like a little child who is confiding in his Father. He always hears us. Ask him, shamelessly, all that we believe is good. And end with the words of Jesus: “ But not my will, but thine be done.” And give thanks to God, because we know that his will is done.

4.     PETITION

For all human beings tempted by the appearance of good, for all those who put all their efforts in enjoying this life as if nothing more existed.

For us, Christians, the Church, who have received so much light, who know Jesus but who have not succeeded in trusting him and continue to be tempted between  the seductive attraction of this world and trust in his Word.


MY WORDS FOR YOU

King David desired a married woman, Bethsheba. To gain her, he had her husband killed. The prophet Nathan confronted him with his sin. In his repentance, David composed  this psalm, PSALM 50. We make it our own. We too feel we are sinners, the condition of sinners weighs on us. With the words of David, we ask God for liberation.

Psalm 50 Have mercy on me, O God, in your kindness blot out my sins.


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