3/21/10

Homily for the Fifth Sunday of Lent


Image source: Bowalley Road

Love and the law: What did Jesus do?
(Scriptures for this Sunday's liturgy)

We don’t know what Jesus wrote on the ground
but we do know that back in Jesus' day,
writing on the ground in this way was a sign of being distraught.

It’s clear that Jesus resisted taking the political bait
to argue with the scribes and the Pharisees
and it’s safe to assume that they were at least a little insulted
that Jesus was ignoring their questions.

But in the face of this game of
“My rules are better than your rules”
-- Jesus chooses not to play.

That doesn’t mean that Jesus thought rules were no good.

He recognizes that the woman in the story
has broken an important rule:
she has committed adultery.

But Jesus isn’t in this just for the rules.
He’s in this for the person - who is bound by the rules.

These days,
we can tend to get this business
about Jesus and rules and persons mixed up.

The way some folks talk you might think
that while Jesus cared very much about loving people
- he didn’t care at all about rules and laws.

Well, it’s true that the whole of Jesus’ message
can be summed up in the word LOVE.
But we can’t lose sight of the fact that for Jesus,
love was not some
free-wheeling, personally-fulfilling, feel-good emotion:
for Jesus, love was law.

That is to say:
for Jesus, love is what binds us to God and to one another;
for Jesus, love is what renders us accountable to God and to one another;
for Jesus, love is what holds each of us responsible
- not so much for our own happiness and comfort-
but for the common good,
and especially for the welfare of the poor.

That's not to say that people exist for the sake of the law,
- not even for the law of love.
Rather, the law, including the law of love,
exists for those who are bound by it.

Why was Jesus distraught?
What distressed Jesus
in the questions of the scribes and the Pharisees
is that they were concerned only about the law
and cared not at all about the woman before them.

What Jesus sees so clearly is the person,
he sees the woman:
who has sinned, who has been found out, who is ashamed,
who is accused and judged and who is waiting to be sentenced.

The scribes and Pharisees want only
to know how to get rid of her.

Jesus’ only interest is to save her -
to save her from the rule-breaking foolishness of her sin.

Jesus wants to save her
- from her failure to respect how she was bound to God and her husband
- from her failure to be true to promises she had made,
to the word she had given
- from her failure to be responsible for the good of others in her life.

And how does he do that?

First he dismisses those who care only about the rules.
Those who cared only about the law
now become the shamed and the embarrassed.
Now they are the ones caught, exposed,
judged and condemned,
first by Jesus’ silence
and then by his exposing their own infractions of the law:
Let the one among you who is without sin cast the first stone…”

Once the hypocrites are gone,
Jesus draws the woman into the court of his mercy.
He fully recognizes her sin - but chooses not to condemn her.
He frees her from her sin, sending her off -- with but one caution:
“Do not sin any more.”
That is,
“Stop breaking the rules!
Because when you break the rules
you break the law that love is.”

Jesus is all about love
but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t expect us
to play by the rules of love,
to live by the law that love is.

The love Jesus enjoins on us makes great demands
and often those demands are made
at the expense of our personal comfort and individual freedom.

The greatest image of the law of love is the Cross.
This is the kind of self-giving LOVE
with which Jesus expects us to love one another.
Not some free-wheeling, personally-fulfilling, feel-good emotion
but rather, a love whose rule makes life and death demands on us
and calls us to accountability to God, to one another,
and to our own word.

This is love that holds us responsible first for the good of others,
and especially for the poor.

That’s the love we find on the Cross
and that same love is shared with us in the Eucharist
at the Lord’s table, on the altar of his sacrifice,
and in the supper of his mercy.

May the love we receive in this sacrament
be the love we offer each other
and may we, like the woman in the gospel, come to know
how merciful is the Lord whose love is law.


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7 comments:

  1. Wow,
    What amazing words that we all need so much. This week has been a bad one for the Catholic Church, especially with more revelations on clerical sex abuse in many countries and the press and media have been busy. Some of the reporting has been fair , some overtly anti-Catholic and it has been sickening and difficult to know how to respond. I blogged about it and tried to find a way of responding that was not too filled with anger. It was not easy and I still am unsure about the implications. The Pope and the Vatican curia don't really speak to me much at this time and I find their words sometimes hollow. Your post hits home how we have to find in our hearts the only way forward is with Christ.
    Thank you. I wish there were more like you.
    Godbless

    ReplyDelete
  2. Another beautiful homily... excellent.

    If I could emblazon these words of yours, in particular, across the sky, I would:

    Jesus is all about love
    but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t expect us
    to play by the rules of love,
    to live by the law that love is.

    The love Jesus enjoins on us makes great demands
    and often those demands are made
    at the expense of our personal comfort and individual freedom.

    That says so much and I love the way you put it.

    If only I could really surrender to it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. what if you are not sure what the rules are?
    what if you just don't understand how 'to live by the law that love is'?

    not that I am doing anything that I know is wrong- but I could be-
    I just don't know-

    I don't know what the rules are.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Those are good questions, Alejandra. Might be good to speak with someone at your parish with whom you could share your circumstances, concerns and questions.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think, alejandra the rules of love are these. Just like in CP's homily ... did you hurt someone by your actions? Did you fail to respect the promise you made to others or to God. Did you fail to be responsible for the good of others?

    I once heard a priest speak on sin. He said it all came down to one sin. Being "selfish". With every sin ... I see what he says is true. You truly have to think if by your actions ... have you hurt another? Cheating, stealing ... you name it ... it all comes down to that, I believe.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Alejandra, perhaps start with the two great commandments. Love the Lord with all your heart (which takes work!) and treat others the way you would wish to be treated (which takes humility!) To this, I second CP's advice. God bless!

    ReplyDelete
  7. thank you, Christine, J.T. and ConcordPastor for your help and advice-

    ReplyDelete

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