In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost.
As we progress deeper and deeper into the weeks of
Lent, we can say with an ever-growing sense of
gratitude and of joy, of a serene and exulting joy
the words of a Psalm, ‘My soul shall live, and with
gratitude I will give glory to the Lord'.
In the first week of Lent we have seen all the
promises of salvation given in the Old Testament
fulfilled: God became man, salvation has come, and
all hopes are possible. And then, in the second week
of Lent, we had the glorious proclamation of all the
Saints of Christendom that not only did God come and
dwell in our midst, but He has poured out upon us,
into the Church, and into every human soul ready to
receive Him the presence, the transforming gift of
the Holy Spirit that makes us gradually commune ever
deeper to the Living God until one day we become
partakers of the Divine nature.
And today, if we ask ourselves, 'But how that? How
can we be forgiven, how can evil be undone?' - one
step brings us deeper into gratitude, deeper into
joy, deeper into certainty when we consider, when we
contemplate the Cross.
There is a passage of the Gospel in which we are
told that when Christ spoke of salvation and of its
conditions, Peter said to Him, 'Who then can be
saved?' - and Christ answered, 'What is not possible
to men is possible for God!’. And He Himself came;
the fullness of God abided in a human person, and He
has power to forgive because He is the victim of all
the evil, all the cruelty, all the destructiveness
of human history. Because indeed, no one but the
victim can forgive those who have brought evil,
suffering, misery, corruption and death into their
lives. And Christ does not only forgive His own
murderers, when He says, 'Father, forgive - they
don't know what they are doing': He goes beyond
this, because He had said, 'Whatever you have done
to one of My smaller brethren and sisters, you have
done it to Me’ - not only in good, but indeed, the
worst: because in compassion, in solidarity He
identifies with every sufferer: the death, the pain,
the agony of each of those who suffer is His. And
so, when He prays, 'Father, forgive! They do not
know what they are doing, what they have been
doing’, He prays for each of us not only in His own
name, but in the name of all those upon whom evil
has visited because of human sin.
But it is not only Christ who forgives; everyone who
has suffered in soul, in body, in spirit, - everyone
is called to grant freedom to those who have made
him suffer.
And so, we can see why Christ says, 'Forgive so that
you may be forgiven' because both the victim and the
culprit are tied in one knot of solidarity and
reciprocal responsibility. Only the victim can say,
'Lord - forgive him, forgive her’, and only then can
the Lord say, ‘I do!’.
But do you realise what responsibility it puts on
each of us with regard to all and everyone? But also
the depth, the glorious depth of hope which opens up
to us when we look at the Cross and see that in
solidarity with all mankind Christ taking upon
Himself all the suffering of the world, accepting to
die an impossible death has said in the name of all
the sufferers, 'Yes, - we forgive!’
This is one more step towards freedom, this is one
more step towards the moment when we will be faced
with Christ's resurrection that engulfs us also
because the risen Christ is risen and is offering
all and each of us the fullness of eternal life.
And so again, and again we can say that Lent is a
spring of a new life, a new time, a time of renewal,
not only in repentance, but in being taken by Christ
Himself as the shepherd took the lost sheep, as the
Lord took up His Cross, brought it to the place of
death, and undid death, undid evil by forgiveness
and giving His life. Once more we are confronted
with another step of our freedom and of newness. Let
us enter ever deeper into this mystery, into this
wonder of salvation, and rejoice in the Lord, and
rejoicing, step after step, more and more, let us
also express our gratitude by newness of life. Amen! |