Saturday, March 30, 2019

Homily for 31 Mar 2019


31 Mar 2019
4th Sunday of Lent, Year C

“The old things have passed away; behold, new things have come,” says Saint Paul.  We just have to be careful to hear what he’s actually saying. 

Saint Paul isn’t saying “bad things” have passed away.  He’s not saying “the past” has passed away, or that “useless things” have passed away.  He’s saying “the old” has passed away.  And, in just the same way, Saint Paul isn’t saying that “better things, worthier, more valuable and important things” have come.  He’s simply saying “new things” have come.

After Moses died and Joshua led the Hebrews into the Promised Land, the manna stopped coming.  The manna “passed away,” and God gave them new food to eat.  That’s all.  God didn’t stop giving his people the manna because it was bad, or because it was useless.  Manna was good, and it served God’s purposes.  But, then, being in the Promised Land, God had another idea in mind for them. 

When we talk about an “old person” passing away, we don’t mean that a “useless” person has passed away, or that a “bad” or “irrelevant” person has passed away.  We mean simply that an “old” person has passed away.  He or she lived a long life, and something new was in store for him or her, and it was time for that “something new” to start.

And I mention this because in today’s understanding of things the word “old” is so often taken to mean “useless,” or “bad,” or “irrelevant.”  And the word “new” so often means the opposite; it means: “good,” “important,” and “valuable.”  And that understanding of “old and new” affects almost every aspect of life, because everything—including us—is either new, or old, or getting older.  And so, there’s an unwritten judgment given to everything—not that things are old or new, but that they are good or bad, to be embraced or to be shunned... because things or people happen to be new or old.

And one aspect of life which we cannot avoid, and which is “old,” is the past.  And, you know, when you hear references to “the past,” they’re usually in the negative—not always, but most of the time.  The past is an anchor; it’s something to be freed from.  The past is where bad experiences and bad memories dwell.  The past haunts a person.  “Stop living in the past,” we might hear (especially in the Church).  And so on.  But that kind of approach to “the past” isn’t very helpful from a human perspective.  And it doesn’t really fit with the Christian mindset.  Our readings point this out.

After Moses had died and Joshua had led the Hebrews into the Promised Land, we know they celebrated the Passover.  But, you know, the Passover itself had happened forty years before (when they’d sprinkled the lambs’ blood on their doors; when death passed over them, and God saved them all).  That event had happened two generations earlier; the adults who’d been there at the Passover itself had mostly died in the exodus in the desert.  And the youngest generation of Hebrews hadn’t even been born yet when the Passover had happened.

So, there they were in the Promised Land, looking forward to a new life...but they were celebrating an event from the past.  They were celebrating it; they were memorializing it; they were cherishing their past.  Now, certainly, bad things had happened to the Hebrews while they were in Egypt.  But a tremendously good thing had also happened there: God had loved them and had set them free.  And so, they remembered God’s goodness in the past, and they celebrated his goodness in the present. 

Their past was the foundation, the reason why they knew themselves to be the beloved, chosen People of God.  Their past gave them their common identity.  For our ancestors in the faith, the idea of running away from the past, or discounting the past as irrelevant would be unthinkable; it wouldn’t make any sense at all.  And, as Christians, we carry that same mindset today.  Just think of what all we experience from the past, things that are “old”.

For example, the rituals we practice as Catholics are old, very old.  The Mass and the sacraments are incredibly old.  The teachings of the Apostles are even older.  So are the Scriptures.  And we come here every Sunday to participate in those very old things from the past.  But we do it because they’re an essential part of our identity as Catholic Christians. 

Just like Joshua and the Hebrews, we celebrate the Passover every Sunday.  Only, in our case, we celebrate, we remember, we memorialize the Body and Blood of the Lamb of God which was broken, and given and poured, to set us free.  Just think: As a country we celebrate Memorial Day once a year.  Well, as Catholics, we have our own memorial day every week.  We remember the self-sacrifice of Christ as that which gave us victory over sin and death.  The Cross of Jesus is our “flag” that we march behind. 

So the past is very important to us.  It’s old, but it’s hardly irrelevant; it’s essential to who we are.  And what we discover in celebrating certain events from the past, memorializing them, and—in some sense—reliving those events from the past, is that the past really isn’t the past at all.  In a very real sense, the past and the present are one. 

Think of some good things that have happened in your past as an individual.  Graduation from high school, the birth of a child, being in love, being in the top three at a competition.  Maybe it’s something simpler, like finishing a good book, or doing some woodworking, or remembering a beloved pet. 

Well, those good things from the past, the “old things”, have an effect on us—in the present.  We remember an experience, and we smile.  We remember departed loved ones, and our hearts are touched.  We remember our personal triumphs, and we feel pride and gratitude.  The past (both the good and the bad of it) affects us in the present.  The past is present.  And we remember, we celebrate, we memorialize and cherish past goodness—not because it’s “old,” but because it’s “good.”

Whoever said, “Don’t live in the past” maybe never had any goodness in his or her past.  Either that, or maybe they fell into the trap of believing that “old” means “useless”, and “new” means “good and worthwhile.”  Either way, it’s a sad saying: “Don’t live in the past.”  It’s a good thing we as Catholics don’t adhere to that, because if we did, we wouldn’t have any reason to be happy, we wouldn’t have any reason to be hopeful. 

And that’s because the promises we hope to see fulfilled (heaven, happiness, lasting love and life, and so on)...those promises were given to us in the past.  The Eucharist was given to us...in the past.  All the sacraments were given to us...in the past.  Life was breathed into each of us...in the past (it’s why we celebrate birthdays).  Our potential as individuals, as a people of faith, was given to us...in the past. 

We don’t “live in the past,” but we certainly “live the past.”  It’s an essential and good part of our present.  And it pushes us into the future, into tomorrow, and into eternity.  So, as Saint Paul says, “The old things have passed away, behold new things have come.”  And what he means is, “Good things have passed away, behold more good things have come.”  Things pass away, people pass away, events fall into memory.  But the goodness of them does not pass away.

Goodness is always an experience of the present.  And so, thanks be to God for the past, for the good things and people and events of the past, and the goodness from them that we enjoy in the present.  Most especially, thanks be to God for the goodness of the sacrifice of Jesus all those centuries ago.  It’s still a goodness we share in today: broken and poured out for the ages—the Bread of Eternal Life, and the Chalice of Everlasting Salvation.

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