In
the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
Lent is a time of repentance, a
time when our heart of stone must be made by the
power of God into a heart of flesh, from insensitive
to become perceptive, from cold and hard to become
warm and open to others, and indeed, to God Himself.
Lent is a time of renewal when
like spring, everything become new again; when our
life that had gone into a twilight becomes alive
with all the intensity which God can communicate to
us, humans, by making us partakers of His Holy
Spirit, by making us partakers, through the Holy
Sacraments and the direct gift of God, of the Divine
nature.
It is a time of reconciliation,
and reconciliation is a joy: it is God's joy, and it
is our joy; it's a new beginning.
Today is the day of Saint John of
the Ladder, and I want to read to you a few phrases
of his which are relevant to the particular time of
the year in which we live:
“Repentance, that is our return
to God is renewal of our baptism; it is our effort
to renew our covenant with God, our promise to
change our life. It is a time when we can acquire
humility, that is peace; peace with God, peace with
ourselves, peace with all the created world.
Repentance is born of hope and rejection of despair.
And one who repents, is one who deserves
condemnation
-
and yet, goes away from the tribunal without shame,
because repentance is our peace with God. And this
is achieved through a worthy life, alien to the sins
we committed in the past. Repentance is cleansing of
our conscience. Repentance implies carrying off all
sadness and pain.”
And if we ask ourselves how we
can achieve it, how we can come to this, how we can
respond to God Who receives us as the father
received the prodigal son, a God Who has waited for
us, longingly, Who, rejected, never turned away from
us - how can we respond to Him? Here is a short word
about prayer :
“Don't use in prayer falsely wise
words; because it is often the simple and
uncomplicated whispering of children that rejoices
our heavenly Father. Don't try to say much when you
speak to God, because otherwise your mind in search
of words will be lost in them. One word spoken by
the publican brought Divine mercy upon him; one word
filled with faith saved the thief on the cross. The
use of the multiplicity of words when we pray
disperses our mind and fill it with imaginations.
One word spoken to God collects the mind in His
presence. And if a word, in thy prayer, reaches you
deeply, if you perceive it profoundly - dwell in it,
dwell in it, because at such moments our Angel
guardian prays with us because we are true to
ourselves and to God”.
Let us remember what Saint John
of the Ladder says, even if you forget the short
comments (which I introduced) to make his text more
readily understandable. Let us remember his words
because he was a man who knew what it means to turn
to God, to stay with God, to be God’s joy
and to rejoice in Him. He is offered us in this
time, when we are ascending towards the days of the
Passion, he is offered us as an example of what
grace Divine can do to transform an ordinary,
simple human being into a light to the world.
Let us learn from him, let us
follow his example, let us rejoice in what
God can do by His power in a human being, and let us
confidently, with faith, with an exulting and yet
serene joy follow the advice, listen to God
begging us to find a way of life and telling
us that with Him, in Him we will be
alive, because He is the Truth but also the
Way and also Life eternal. Amen. |