Sunday, April 6, 2014

Preached St. Kateri (SCC and SMM), Sat/Sun April 5/6 - From death to life

Mass readings:  http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/040614.cfm


                It’s important, I think, in order to understand our first reading from the prophet Ezekiel, to read the rest of the story so to speak, to read what comes just before this reading in the 37th chapter of the Book of Ezekiel.  And what comes before is this: Ezekiel has a vision – a vision in which he is standing in the middle of a vast valley covered with bones, dry bones baking in the sun.  A vast army that has been slaughtered there.   The Lord commands Ezekiel to prophesy, to pray, over these bones and say “dry bones hear the word of the Lord!”  He does, and in this vision the bones begin to rattle and move together and sinews and flesh and skin cover the bones.  And Ezekiel prays over them some more, saying “from the four winds come, O breath, and breathe into these slain that they may come to life.  The breath entered them, they came to life and stood on their feet, a vast army.”

            It is this vision of Ezekiel that is the foundation for the Lord’s promise to His people Israel and to you and me that was just proclaimed – “I will open your graves.  I will put my Spirit within you that you may come to life.  I have spoken and I will do it, says the Lord.”

            The theme of this reading, the theme of all our readings, is how the power of God can bring life out of death.  It’s appropriate for this season of Lent, and it’s appropriate for this season of springtime.  As I was pondering these readings the other day, driving along, I looked at all the trees, stripped and barren, and thought of these dry bones.  How even though we’re in April the trees and bushes still have the look of winter – lifeless, bleak.  And I had a vision of my own – how in a few short weeks these same trees and bushes will be bursting forth with new life – first little buds, then fresh green leaves, then fully clothed, wrapped in green.  Some bursting with color – pinks and blues and yellows as they flower in succession - the magnolias, then the cherries, the lilacs, the dogwoods.  As we watch this happen around us each year, do we stop to think about what a miracle that is?  It’s a sign to us every year of how God can bring new life out of what seems to be death.

            Our Gospel tells of Our Lord’s greatest miracle, the greatest sign, of who He was, and is.  His greatest example of bringing life out of death, foreshadowing His own rising from the dead on Easter Sunday.  You see, Lazarus didn’t seem to be dead.  He was dead, four days buried in the tomb.  “There will be a stench,” Martha tells Him, oblivious to what the Lord plans to do.  But for the glory of His Father, and so that all there in Bethany that day might know that He, Jesus, is the Son of God whom the Father has sent, that He, Jesus, has power over life and death, He stands before the tomb, tells them to roll away the stone, and commands this dead man, “Lazarus, come out!”  And Lazarus obeys.

            It’s an awesome story, mind-blowing if we stop to really take it in, if we don’t let it go in one ear and out the other, since, after all, we’ve heard it a hundred times.  An awesome example of the power of this Jesus fellow, but (if we’re honest) a little hard to relate to.  What does this story, or Ezekiel’s vision for that matter, have to do with your life and mine?  Certainly this Gospel is a foreshadowing of our own entering into eternal life, but what’s the practical take-away for us, right here and now?

            I think the answer is this –

            You and I are in our own tombs.  Yes, I’m convinced that because of our fallen sinful nature, what St. Paul calls “living in the flesh,” that you and I, each in our own way, are sort of dead and buried in our own tombs.  You and I are in some way, “dry bones.”  In our own tombs – tombs, perhaps, of despair and hopelessness.  Tombs, perhaps, of greed, avarice, self-centeredness.  Perhaps tombs of sinful habits or addictions, whatever they might be – alcohol, drugs, pornography, sex, gambling.  Tombs maybeof laziness, gossip, unforgiven grudges, whatever.  We lie in our tombs, bound and wrapped and unable to move, for four days, or forty years.

            And in this season of Lent, in the last couple weeks of this season of Lent, Our Lord stands before us, before you and me, perturbed, perhaps,s that we haven’t fully trusted Him, haven’t fully understood who He is, haven’t fully believed that He is the Son of God sent by the Father to save us.

            And He commands you and me to COME OUT of our tombs.  To repent and be converted, to rise and walk out, unwrapped, unburdened, and free.  He stands before us not in judgment or condemnation but with an ocean of mercy, living water which He invites us to plunge into. 

            And the place in which we most intimately and powerfully encounter that mercy is in the confessional.  In the Sacrament of Reconciliation.  Where we kneel, sinful and sorrowful, ask His forgiveness and mercy, and draw deeply from the well of His grace, His power, to go forth freed from whatever binds us.  To open the door, walk out, free.

            He invites this day us to trust in His mercy and power, the same power which healed the blind man and raised Lazarus from the dead, the same power which can free us from our own tombs of sin if we’ll only trust Him.  The same power which will make our dry bones rattle and shake, grow flesh and skin, rise and be filled with His Spirit.  “I have promised and I will do it,” says the Lord.

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