Saturday, February 21, 2015

Homily for Sunday, 22 February 2015

1st Sunday in Lent

Readings of the day: Genesis 9:8-15; Psalm 25:4-5, 6-7, 8-9; 1 Peter 3:18-22; Mark 1:12-15



What are some of the things we do during Lent? Maybe Lent is a time for us to focus more deeply on prayer. Maybe during Lent we might commit more intently to ministry to and with the poor; the sick; the elderly; the homeless; the homebound; others in need. Maybe the Lenten discipline of abstaining especially from meat on Fridays may help us to grow spiritually. Then again, meat-free Lenten Fridays are a light penance for me. I look forward in particular to our parish’s Fish Fry every Friday during Lent. I like fish, but even more I enjoy meeting and being with all of us, the people of St. Kateri Parish. And I enjoy supporting our parish’s Boy Scouts by whose generosity we have our Fish Fry every Friday during Lent.

Maybe during Lent we might give up something other than just meat on Fridays, like sweets, coffee, or social media… One year, before I became a Basilian, my roommates suggested that I give up puns for Lent. This was a heavy penance for me; my roommates probably lamented that it was only for forty days!

All these Lenten activities are excellent, especially if they help to deepen our relationships with one another and with God: Works of mercy and justice; increased commitment to prayer; abstaining from meat on Fridays during Lent, and possibly giving up something else we enjoy but that is not essential to us. But, even if we do all these activities during Lent, what if we were to focus simply on remembering more profoundly God’s loving kindness; God’s saving, sustaining presence in our everyday lives?

The people of ancient Israel; the people of the Bible had a special word for God’s loving, kind action toward us and our responsibility, in light of God’s loving kindness toward us, to act with loving kindness toward one another. This word is “covenant.” 

Several times we hear this word, “covenant,” in our first reading today from the Book of Genesis. God calls “Noah and… his sons” out of the ark after the Great Flood, and then immediately makes a covenant with them and “every living creature” that has survived the flood. “I will establish my covenant with you,” God says to all who were on the ark. The rainbow will be “the sign… for all ages to come of the covenant between” God and Noah “and every living creature” for all time. Nothing, especially no flood, will ever destroy this new covenant God has made with all creation. “I will recall the covenant I have made,” God promises.

But what is a covenant? Is it some kind of contract? Perhaps we might understand a covenant as a contract. Many of the Biblical covenants between God and the people are written like contracts: God makes a promise to bless and to save the people; the people are responsible for keeping God’s commandments; for remaining faithful to their end of the bargain with God in return. If the people fail to remain faithful to God, they may incur a curse or destruction, like a forty-day flood!

But a covenant is more than just a contract. Imagine us signing on a line for the following: Divine parts and labor: Salvation of humankind and all creation. Cost: Infinity dollars, plus applicable taxes and unwavering faithfulness to God’s commandments; ark building materials sold separately; available while supplies last.

Fortunately for us, a covenant is more than this. But what is a covenant, among ourselves or between us and God, if not merely a contract? We might look to the sacraments as signs of what covenant means, especially for us as Christians. Sacraments are signs to us, much like the rainbow was to Noah, of God’s loving and kind presence to us; God’s saving and sustaining care for all of creation.

Do any of us remember when, a few years ago, concern about legal re-definition of marriage and the rate of marriage breakdown in this country led our sisters and brothers in some Protestant traditions to enter into so-called “covenant marriages”? Their concern was that our society understands marriage too much as a limited, breakable legal contract and not enough as an unbreakable covenant bond; a sign of something even more than wife and husband give to one another in a marriage. We might call this “something more” God’s presence; sustenance; strength; grace; loving kindness. “Covenant marriages” (I think rightly) struck at our social reduction of marriage to a mere contract. My concern is that they fell into this same trap of reducing marriage to a mere contract and so have not really solved this ongoing social problem.

Is not marriage a covenant relationship, not only a one-time contract offer on the wedding day but lived throughout a married couple’s life together? The same might be said of all our Church’s sacraments: They are visible signs of our relationship with God and with one another. Our sacraments are visible signs of God’s present, loving, and saving kindness toward us and all creation. Here we celebrate together one of these visible signs of God’s presence and loving kindness; of covenant relationship, our Eucharist.

In the same way, our second reading from the First Letter of Peter speaks to us of baptism in terms of covenant. “A few persons… were saved by water”; by the flood in Noah’s time. Now we are all offered salvation in Jesus Christ by baptism into Christ’s suffering, death, and resurrection. Baptism is not just a one-time contract with God. It is our entrance into covenant relationship with God and with one another, the Church. It is our entrance into the life of “the Kingdom of God” that our Gospel reading today says is “at hand,” here and now. We enter into this relationship with God and with one another in baptism and in every sacrament; a relationship through which God’s loving kindness is made present through our community of faith.

Baptism, like any sacrament, is not a mere contract. It is more than a contract. Indeed, I think a covenant relationship is more difficult for us to maintain, let alone to understand, than an ordinary contract. All is well if we honor the terms of a contract. And if we do not honor the terms of a contract, we may pay a penalty. In Biblical terms, we might (although I believe instances of this are rare) be cursed or destroyed. 

Try as we might, we cannot break the covenant we have now with God; the covenant God has made with all of creation. But what can we do to honor this covenant relationship with God and with one another? What does God invite us to do to honor this covenant?

God invites us simply to remember our covenant relationship with him and with one another; to remember that God is always faithful to this relationship: “I will recall the covenant I have made,” God promises. God invites us to remember and to be confident in God’s mercy for the times we fail to live up to the same covenant.

This remembrance of covenant is the high point of our Mass. We hear the words of Jesus in our Eucharistic Prayer: “Do this in remembrance of me.” And then our Eucharistic Prayer continues in remembrance of “the saving Passion of [God’s] Son, his wondrous Resurrection and Ascension into heaven” and our looking “forward to his second coming.”

We remember covenant, not a mere contract. We remember; we celebrate; we live this covenant with God and as one community of faith. We remember especially through our sacraments: Visible signs of covenant; visible signs of God’s loving kindness; of God’s sustaining, caring, saving presence to us and to all of creation.

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