Friday, 26 February 2016

February 28th 2016.  Third Sunday of Lent
GOSPEL: Luke 13:1-9
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio


Don Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...

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GOSPEL: Luke 13:1-9
Some people arrived and told Jesus about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with that of their sacrifices At this he said to them, ‘Do you suppose these Galileans who suffered like that were greater sinners than any other Galileans? They were not, I tell you. No; but unless you repent you will all perish as they did. Or those eighteen on whom the tower at Siloam fell and killed them? Do you suppose that they were more guilty than all the other people living in Jerusalem? They were not, I tell you. No; but unless you repent you will all perish as they did.’
He told this parable: ‘A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came looking for fruit on it but found none. He said to the man who looked after the vineyard, “Look here, for three years now I have been coming to look for fruit on this fig tree and finding none. Cut it down: why should it be taking up the ground?” “Sir,” the man replied “leave it one more year and give me time to dig round it and manure it: it may bear fruit next year; if not, then you can cut it down.”‘
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ

Kieran’s summary . . . In the Gospel, Jesus is asked to make sense of an incident in which people are tragically killed. Jesus’ reply is a little strange. First of all he says that these people didn’t die because of their bad behaviour, but then he goes on to say that all of us will die in a similar way if we don’t convert! What can Jesus mean? In order to understand him we must take a different perspective on suffering. The people who questioned Jesus were asking the wrong question. The issue is not whether suffering is brought on by living a bad life. Jesus is not interested at all in apportioning blame. Suffering, rather - whether it is our own or that of someone else - is a call to mission. Mother Teresa heard the cry of the poor man, “I thirst!” and she realised that she was being called to serve Jesus. When we hear of horrific deaths or the plight of others, then we must be stirred into action. Our own suffering and the suffering of others can become the basis of a new way looking at things. They can help us to leave the place where we are trapped and go to serve others. Lent is not a time for arid spiritualism, or sterile moral perfection. When Jesus says, “Unless you convert, you will die in the same way”, he does not mean that a horrific death is the punishment that awaits for not converting. Rather, he means that if we are not converted to living a life of love and service to others, then we will die as the people in the tragic incidents died – without having produced the fruit that issues from responding to God’s call to love. Then Jesus tells the parable of a fig tree that produces no fruit. The owner wants to cut it down, but the labourer asks that it be given one more chance. Jesus is the labourer in the vineyard that wants to give us the chance to produce fruit. We have produced nothing yet, because we have not responded to the call to love. But he dies on the cross, gives us his body and blood, so that we will be nurtured to produce fruit for others.

Jesus is presented with a difficult question and he comes up with a surprising answer.
The Gospel this Sunday is very serious. Jesus is presented with the story of the occasion when Pilate had sought to teach the people of Jerusalem a lesson regarding the power of Rome. He had killed a number of Galileans at the Temple, and their blood had become mixed with that of the sacrifices. This was a horrific event from the Hebrew perspective.  For them, blood is the principle of life, and to mix one’s blood with that of animals is an act of profanity on a grand scale. Jesus is asked to make sense of these events and he responds in a very surprising way. He says, “Do you think these Galileans were more guilty than anyone else? Did they deserve to die in this way because of their previous bad behaviour? No, I tell you. And if you do not convert, each one of you will die in the same way”. Then Jesus goes on to mention a number of people who died when a tower fell on them, asking the same question. ‘Did they die like this because of something they had done? No, and if you do not change you will meet a similar end”. He goes on to recount a parable that seems to be disconnected from these comments, but it is not. In the parable, an owner wishes to cut down a fig tree because it has not produced fruit for a number of years. But the labourer asks that the tree be given one last chance to produce the goods. What does this have to do with the discourse about the people who died in a horrible fashion?

Moses had fled from the suffering of his people. Now he encounters God who tells him that his mission is to relieve the suffering of his people. 
In the first reading we read nothing less than the account of the revelation to Moses of the name of God. Moses is given his mission in this passage and he meets God for the first time. Earlier, the book of Exodus recounts how Moses had grown up in the court of the Pharaoh. Then, seeing the terrible conditions of his brethren, the Israelites, he had killed an Egyptian. This caused him to flee from Egypt and he ended up tending sheep for many years for a family who gave him shelter. He married into this family and established a life for himself, remaining a refugee, an outsider, but distant from the terrible conditions of his brethren that had once scandalized him. Evidently, this profound material from Exodus cannot be treated properly in a short reflection of this sort. What is of interest to us is the fact that Moses had fled from the miserable conditions of his people. He had tried to act against the human suffering that he witnessed, but he had not achieved anything and decided to flee. Now he meets God and is given to understand that the same suffering he had fled from has become his mission.

We will all perish like those who were killed by Pilate, without having discovered that the secret of life is to move out from oneself and learn how to love as Jesus did.
Now let us return to the Gospel. Jesus is telling us that event in which the people were killed by Pilate, and the incident in which people were crushed under a tower, are both calls to mission. The issue is not the question of who is guilty, who deserves to suffer and die. The issue is that my neighbour is suffering and I am called to action. The plight of others, their desperate need, is my mission. In this time of Lent, we are not called to an arid spiritualism, or a sterile perfection. We are called to be prompted by our encounter with the eternal, with the extraordinary of God, to reconsider the suffering that we have experienced around us and which has entered into our hearts. This ought to lead to our conversion. “If you do not convert, you will die in the same way”. In other words, we will perish in the same way without having found the meaning of existence, which is to learn how to love. Jesus is not interested in scolding us, or in punishing us in a vengeful way. In this parable he wishes, simply, to call us to love. People can be weighed down by suffering, but it remains there in a sterile way unless it becomes mission. Our own suffering and the suffering of others can become the basis of a new way looking at things. They can help us to leave the place where we are trapped and go to serve the people. Moses, following his encounter with God, becomes the one who will lead the people out of their affliction. He had worked for years as a shepherd in preparation for the time when he would become the shepherd of the people of God.

We are called to be the fig tree that produces a harvest. Up to now we have produced nothing, but Jesus is the merciful labourer who gives his life that we may have another chance to be productive

In the same way, these stories of suffering and misery that surround us are ways in which God calls us. Think of the plea for help that Mother Teresa of Calcutta heard from the poor man who cried, “I am thirsty”. She understood that this was a cry from Our Lord himself. How often the missions of great saints take their starting points from the plight of the suffering that is finally understood to have a priority over everything else. We hear so many stories of human suffering. How often do they become the impulse for real change in our lives, for prayer, for action, for being in the presence of God with these brothers and sisters who are suffering? The terrible stories we hear on the news can remain just news or a call to mission. What Jesus is revealing to us this Sunday is that they are a call from God. This fig tree may not have produced fruit up to now. And the chances it has to produce fruit may soon be exhausted. Will this fig tree ever be productive? There is mercy in the labourer who wishes to tend the tree and give it another chance. There is mercy above all in Jesus who gives his life, his blood, his sacraments, for us so that we will be given another chance to respond. And we become ourselves only when we produce fruit, become mature, provide nutrition for others. All of us are called to bring forth this harvest.

Friday, 19 February 2016

February 21st 2016.  Second Sunday of Lent
GOSPEL Luke 9:28-36
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio


Don Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...

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GOSPEL Luke 9:28-36
Jesus took with him Peter and John and James and went up the mountain to pray. As he prayed, the aspect of his face was changed and his clothing became brilliant as lightning. Suddenly there were two men there talking to him; they were Moses and Elijah appearing in glory, and they were speaking of his passing which he was to accomplish in Jerusalem. Peter and his companions were heavy with sleep, but they kept awake and saw his glory and the two men standing with him. As these were leaving him, Peter said to Jesus, ‘Master, it is wonderful for us to be here; so let us make three tents, one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah’.  He did not know what he was saying. As he spoke, a cloud came and covered them with shadow; and when they went into the cloud the disciples were afraid. And a voice came from the cloud saying, ‘This is my Son, the Chosen One. Listen to him.’ And after the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone. The disciples kept silence and, at that time, told no one what they had seen.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ

Kieran’s summary . . . The story of the Transfiguration of Jesus is the traditional reading for the Second Sunday of Lent. And it makes sense. Lent is about entering into moments of penance and darkness, believing all the while in a greater meaning, in a hidden beauty that lies beneath the struggles that we are experiencing. Jesus is actually transfigured and begins to shine with beauty while he is praying. Every moment of prayer should be a transfiguration for us! It should be a time to contemplate the hidden splendour of Jesus and to see the sense and beauty in our own struggles and tribulations. When we contemplate the beauty of Jesus, we begin to discover something about our own identity and the beauty that lies veiled in our own nature, a beauty that is obscured by our lack of communion with Him. God the Father says at the transfiguration: “This is my beloved Son, Listen to him!” It is in listening to the word of Jesus that we come to really understand the beauty and meaning that lies concealed beneath the sufferings and tribulations of our own lives. These tribulations become transfigured, begin to shine with beauty, when we contemplate them in the light of the beloved Son

The Lenten journey is symptomatic of a general feature of the Christian life: we must enter into moments of darkness and suffering, all the while believing in something good and beautiful that we cannot possess just yet.
The Second Sunday of Lent is traditionally devoted to a description of the Transfiguration. It is marvellously introduced by the reading from the fifteenth chapter of Genesis. In this passage Abraham is called to make an act of faith. He is asked to believe in that which he will not see directly himself. The stars in the heavens are to be a sign of his great legacy and fecundity. Abraham is asked to believe that the world is a veil concealing the great plan that God has for him. He must first enter into darkness and obscurity. That is how it is with things in general. The greatest things have an aspect of the Paschal mystery about them. During Lent we are asked to undertake the works of Lent, which are Paschal works – things that lead us to new life. This necessarily involves passing through moments of darkness. In order to love another person, I must move out of myself into the no man’s land between me and that person. I rediscover myself in the other by first losing myself - like a trapeze artist who leaves his swing and moves towards the other trapeze artist hoping to be grasped. Abraham will become the father of an innumerable group of descendants, but he must first go through an obscure tunnel in which he possesses nothing. He has emptied his hands and for the time being they are not being refilled. This is the moment in which the promise is accepted, a moment between night and day when one does not know if the night has ended yet, or if it will ever end.

Jesus is transfigured while he is praying. Every moment of prayer is a moment of transfiguration, a moment of contemplating and discovering the beauty of Christ, the beauty that is the key to understanding our own identity as well.
In Luke’s account of the Transfiguration, Jesus is lost in prayer at the moment that his countenance begins to change and his garments become bright as lightning. Prayer is this moment of emptying that is the characteristic of Lent as a whole. While I am praying, I may not appear to be doing anything useful or functional, but prayer is that which changes the meaning of everything. When I am lost or distressed, dismayed by the complications of life, it is necessary to stop and immerse oneself in the “uselessness” of prayer in order to find the right direction. Jesus is about to confront the greatest challenge of his mission and it is a moment when things must change their appearance. It is a time to discover the other side of what is real. To the apostles he no longer seems merely human but the Son of God. Things shine when they reveal their true nature and in this case we are talking about God himself! In God, things have their true completion. We discover the hidden secret of our own nature when we behold the countenance of God. Peter says, “It is beautiful for us to be here”. In other words, it is beautiful to see what there is beyond appearances, what is hidden in the humanity of Christ, the direction in which we are all heading, that which is hidden in each one of us. Beauty is not simply aesthetic symmetry; it is the hidden sense of the aesthetic, the secret of the aesthetic. This terror that we are feeling is actually in function of the Kingdom of Heaven that is on its way. When Peter and the others discover the secret of the identity of Christ, they are discovering something profound about their own identity. The Transfiguration impinges on everything about us. Entering into the Transfiguration is not a discovery of something new or different; it is the discovery of a secret that lies hidden in the mystery of Christ and humanity.

It is in listening to the word of Jesus that we come to really understand the beauty and meaning that lies hidden beneath the sufferings and tribulations of our own lives. These tribulations become transfigured, begin to shine with beauty, when we contemplate them in the light of the beloved Son
“This is my beloved Son. Listen to him”. How often we discover that the tribulation we are experiencing is actually a moment of encounter with God. Or we discover that this moment of suffering might be for a greater good. We are confronted with the enigma of reality and then all of a sudden its sense becomes clear to us. There is a distinction between the visible and the audible. The apostles see the beauty of Christ but they are asked to listen to him. When we look upon a person, we perceive only his visible aspect, but when we listen to him we are put in contact with his heart. Christ has much more to tell us than the beauty of his countenance can express. In other words, we need to move from the visible to the invisible through the faculty of listening, through the reception of a word. In summary, we often find ourselves in difficulty and tribulation. What must we do? Contemplate the beauty of the beloved Son of God and listen to his word! This can enable us to see the beauty and meaning of what we ourselves are going through.

Friday, 12 February 2016

February 14th 2016.  First Sunday of Lent
GOSPEL Luke 4:1-13
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio


Don Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...

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GOSPEL Luke 4:1-13
Filled with the Holy Spirit, Jesus left the Jordan and was led by the Spirit through the wilderness, being tempted there by the devil for forty days. During that time he ate nothing and at the end he was hungry. Then the devil said to him, ‘If you are the Son of God, tell this stone to turn into a loaf.’ But Jesus replied, ‘Scripture says: Man does not live on bread alone.’
Then leading him to a height, the devil showed him in a moment of time all the kingdoms of the world and said to him, ‘I will give you all this power and the glory of these kingdoms, for it has been committed to me and I give it to anyone I choose. Worship me, then, and it shall all be yours.’ But Jesus answered him, ‘Scripture says: You must worship the Lord your God, and serve him alone.’
Then he led him to Jerusalem and made him stand on the parapet of the Temple. ‘If you are the Son of God,’ he said to him ‘throw yourself down from here, for scripture says: “He will put his angels in charge of you to guard you,” and again, “They will hold you up on their hands in case you hurt your foot against a stone.” '
But Jesus answered him, ‘It has been said: You must not put the Lord your God to the test.’ Having exhausted all these ways of tempting him, the devil left him, to return at the appointed time.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ

Kieran’s summary . . . The people of Israel were purified for forty years in the desert before entering the Promised Land. And when they did enter, as the first reading on Sunday states, Moses declared that they must always keep their priorities in order, offering the best of themselves continually to God. Lent too is a journey of purification, a journey out of ourselves, away from our egos. The temptations of Jesus described in the Gospel story are temptations to go in the opposite direction, temptations to use things, people, and even God himself in service of our own ego. The first temptation is to turn stone into bread. How often we try to misuse things so that they satisfy our appetites! We don’t care what the real value or the real identity of a thing is so long as it can be used to satisfy me. The second temptation is to acquire power and authority in earthly terms. We wish to control people and structures so that they serve my wishes. The third temptation is to use God to further my own projects and wishes. I don’t seek to follow the will of God. I “pray” and cajole and make bargains that he will aid me in promoting my interests. All of these temptations are filled with deceit. They promise everything and give us nothing. For if we use things for our own ends and do not appreciate their real value, then we not only lose those things, we also lose ourselves. If I go after power and authority in the service of my own ego, then I am really an abject slave to something else. My power and freedom are completely illusory. My real master is Satan. And if I try to use God to further my own interests, then God will be unable to save me. Salvation involves abandonment to the will of God. A God who obeys me is not a God that can save me.

Like the Israelite’s journey in the desert, Lent is a journey in which we move out of our own egos.
The first Sunday of Lent is always dedicated to the account of the temptations of Jesus in the desert, but the first reading from Deuteronomy gives us an important key by which to interpret the journey of Lent on which we are about to embark. In this first reading, we are told of an act that the Israelites must undertake before they can enjoy the land that has been promised to them. The Israelites have been liberated from Egypt and have undergone a journey in the desert before entering the land of Canaan. Now they are asked to take the best of everything that they possess and offer it up, to place it in the hands of the Lord and say, “It is yours!” Like the journey of the Israelites, we are undertaking an austere journey, the journey of Lent, a beautiful and significant passage out of our own egos. This is the real journey that we are on. Fasting, prayer and almsgiving are all instruments that serve to bring us out of ourselves. In the book of Deuteronomy, the Israelites offer the first-fruits because they see the paternity of God in the fact that they have been led into this land of milk and honey. This is what the Israelites are really saying: “I see you Lord; I see your providence in all things”.


The temptations of Satan are a journey in the opposite direction: a journey away from the true meaning of things and God, and into my own dark ego.
And of course the temptation of humanity is to do exactly the opposite! The temptations of Jesus recounted in the Gospel underscore this point. I want to take the stones and turn them into bread, to instrumentalize things so that they satisfy my appetites; to see the world as something that exists to serve my wish for power and affirmation; to consider God as someone whose job it is to facilitate my whims - if I throw myself from the pinnacle of the Temple, he ought to save me. These temptations represent a journey in the opposite sense – a journey from things and God towards the ego, instead of vice-versa. This Gospel is filled with unfathomable meaning, but there is no doubt that it speaks of the way that things that are good in themselves can be utterly corrupted.


Satan tempts us to think that objects exist to satisfy my desires, that power should be usurped to give me control over everything, and that God should be used to bring my projects to fruition.
If we have a hunger, according to Satan’s suggestion, then we should order that things change their identity in order to satisfy that hunger. Things ought to exist in function of my appetite. The fact that this thing is a stone is of no interest to me. All I care about is that it should become bread for me. We desire to transform things, to make them into something else so that they can be useful for us. In the second temptation, Satan encourages us to strive so that the kingdoms of the earth become our possession. The powers and authority of this world are to be usurped so that they can be at my service. I must be the master of my destiny so that all things can contribute towards my good. In the third temptation, the pinnacle of the Temple represents religion in its highest form. Satan suggests that God must obey my caprices. If he is really my father, then, like a spoiled child, I should be able to do what I want and he must comply with my initiatives. If I have had this bright idea, or this ambitious project, the Lord must assist me in bringing it to fruition.

What is the problem with all of these temptations? All of their promises are deceptive. Things lose their true value if I use them for my own ends. Power in the service of my ego involves being a slave to something else. Using God to further my own ambitions means losing God completely. A puppet God that obeys me cannot save me!

None of these suggestions or initiatives of Satan lead to anything genuine or worthwhile. Man does not live by bread alone. We are more than our appetites. Even if I were to turn the stones into bread, bread would not be able to bring me true life. What I need is to have an unbroken relationship with God. If things do not have their proper sense and nobility, then it is of little use that they bring me satisfaction. By making things objects of my desire, I not only lose the true value of those things, I also lose myself. In the second temptation, Satan promises great power, but it is interesting that to obtain this power one has to first prostrate oneself before evil. You think you have power but you are really the slave of something else. The authority and the sway that you believe you possess have really been robbed from somewhere else. Satan says, “Go on higher!” but it is a trap in which you really sink down further. Power involves making a lot of compromises. Any power that is exercised in function of one’s ego is in reality a trap. And in the third temptation, the fact of trying to utilize God for my own benefit causes us to lose God himself. When God is placed under me, he is no longer God. A God that obeys me can no longer save me! While I put God to the test, he cannot redeem me. These are the snares of the human condition - things, relationships, ideas. All of them can become our masters. Deceiving us into thinking that they are giving us more, they are really impoverishing us, sending us into the emptiness of our own solitude.

Friday, 5 February 2016

February 7th 2016.  Fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time
GOSPEL - Luke 5:1-11
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini, broadcast on Vatican Radio


Don Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading ...

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GOSPEL - Luke 5:1-11
Jesus was standing one day by the Lake of Gennesaret, with the crowd pressing round him listening to the word of God, when he caught sight of two boats close to the bank. The fishermen had gone out of them and were washing their nets. He got into one of the boats - it was Simon’s - and asked him to put out a little from the shore. Then he sat down and taught the crowds from the boat.
When he had finished speaking he said to Simon, ‘Put out into deep water and pay out your nets for a catch’. ‘Master,’ Simon replied ‘we worked hard all night long and caught nothing, but if you say so, I will pay out the nets for a catch.’ And when they had done this they netted such a huge number of fish that their nets began to tear, so they signalled to their companions in the other boat to come and help them; when these came, they filled the two boats to sinking point.
When Simon Peter saw this he fell at the knees of Jesus saying, ‘Leave me, Lord; I am a sinful man.’ For he and all his companions were completely overcome by the catch they had made; so also were James and John, sons of Zebedee, who were Simon’s partners. But Jesus said to Simon, ‘Do not be afraid; from now on it is men you will catch’. Then, bringing their boats back to land, they left everything and followed him.
The Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ

Kieran’s summary . . . We find similar stories in the first reading and in the Gospel. The prophet Isaiah sees the glory of God and becomes aware of his own unworthiness. But God purifies him by fire and sends him on his mission. In the Gospel, Peter sees the power of Jesus revealed in the miraculous catch of fish. He realizes that Jesus is the Messiah, and that he (Peter) is unworthy to be the companion of such a figure. The fisherman declares, “Keep away from me Lord for I am a sinful man!” But Jesus does not reject him on account of his sinfulness. Instead he calls him on a mission to be a fisher of men. These stories have a lot to say to us. We are all inclined to think that God wants us to be pure and sinless before he will have anything to do with us. We think that we will be ready to fulfil our mission in life only when we get our acts together and improve our moral behaviour. And when we see someone else acting wrongly, we think that the way to tackle the problem is to accuse the person and tell them what a mess they are in. But the readings tell us that God has a different way. Both Peter and Isaiah first behold the glory and beauty of God, and then they become aware of their own unworthiness. And this sense of guilt and shame makes them aware of their need of God. They abandon themselves into his hands, allowing him to purify them and send them out on mission. In this Year of Mercy, it is important that we have a right idea of what is involved in the pardoning of sin. Pardon doesn’t just involve Jesus wiping clean a bureaucratic list of my sins located somewhere up heaven. Pardon involves first beholding the beauty of God; as a result, I recognize my own unworthiness and impurity; consequently, I allow God to enter my existence with his transforming power. Sin thus becomes the place where God’s power operates in my life. As a result I am changed and the Lord can send me on mission.

The first reading and the Gospel both recount the reactions of people who have beheld the glory of God.
The first reading describes the wonderful call of the prophet Isaiah. The prophet sees the glory of God and reacts by declaring, “I am lost! I am a man of unclean lips who lives in the midst of a people of unclean lips. Yet I have seen the Lord of hosts!” In the Gospel we find a similar situation. Peter reacts to the unexpected action of Jesus when he manifests himself as the Messiah. Peter had been fishing all night long without catching anything. But he entrusts himself to the instructions of Jesus and casts his nets again, with extraordinary results. In reaction he throws himself at the Lord’s feet and declares, “Lord, distance yourself from me for I am a sinful man!”

The best way to become aware of our sinfulness is not through accusations from others; the best way is to see the beauty of God. This leads us to recognize our own poverty
Is this reaction of shame by Isaiah and Peter a wrong reaction? In Isaiah we see that this shame leads to something important. A hot coal is touched to the prophet’s lips and his sins are forgiven. Sin becomes the place where Isaiah encounters purification and forgiveness. And from here his mission begins. So it is with each one of us. There is nothing wrong with Peter’s confession that he is a sinful man. But there is something wrong with his deduction that Jesus should therefore keep his distance from him. Jesus, in fact, insists on staying close to him, for together they can do extraordinary things. Peter obeyed Jesus’ first instruction to cast his nets again, and now the second instruction from Jesus is to abandon the nets and become a fisher of men. The central point here is that the Lord shows us a new way of looking at sin. In this Year of Mercy it is essential that we develop a new way of interpreting sin. The natural reading of sin is to say, “I am a terrible sinner. God cannot wish to have anything to do with me while I remain like this.” But let us consider how Isaiah and Peter come to understand their sinfulness. Isaiah first has an experience of the glory of God, while Peter has an experience of the power of Jesus. As a result both become conscious of their own sinfulness. How mistaken we are in our techniques of trying to educate people about sin!  We think that the important thing is to explain to people where they are going wrong. God’s strategy is much different and involves showing us his beauty. Imagine that our house is in a bad state and someone comes in and starts saying, “How dirty it is here! What a mess!” But the Lord has a different approach. He invites us to his own house and shows us how beautiful it is. When we return home we realize the awful state of our own house. Our parameters are changed and we become aware that what we thought was fine is in reality far from acceptable. It is God who provides us with the criteria for recognizing our sin! We are given a glimpse of beauty. We become conscious of our poverty and of what is lacking in our lives.

Awareness of sin is a starting point for abandoning ourselves to God
This might prompt us to exclaim, “Lord, have nothing to do with me!” Many people, especially the young, believe that God wants to have nothing to do with sinners like them. We must continually battle this sadness and discouragement that lodges deep in our hearts.  We think that Jesus rejects us because we have made mistakes, but the making of mistakes is the very point of departure for Jesus! It is the prelude for abandoning ourselves to him. It is the stimulus for allowing the hot coal touch our lips and make us pure. The word “purify” in Greek comes from the word for “fire”. To be purified is to pass through fire and be transformed by it. Like Simon Peter we must face up to who we have been up to this point in our lives. Our old self-perception ceases to be absolute. The consciousness of our sin is a fertile ground for renewal, for a radical openness to beginning again from scratch.

The pardon of God is not a bureaucratic wiping of the slate, but a transforming action of God that leads to mission
In this Year of Mercy it is essential that we attain a consciousness of our sin. If we do not have this consciousness, then how can we appreciate or truly welcome the pardon that is being extended to us? But it is also essential that we lead people to an awareness of their sinfulness in an affirmative way, by showing them the beauty of God, and not in an accusatory way. Unless there is a period of shame and embarrassment, of despair at our own incapacity to do good, then we will not abandon the reins into the hands of God. The pardon of God is not a bureaucratic thing; it is not like a building inspector’s report that declares that the edifice is now sound; it is not the wiping of the slate clean in the records’ office in the sky. Pardon, rather, is the transforming action of God in our lives. The Year of Mercy is the year of transformation, of using our poverty as a springboard to be carried aloft by the tenderness of God. The mercy of God is something powerful and active. Let us allow God to be the one who interprets the significance of our sinfulness! For him it is a sign of how much he can do with us. Consider that the most terrible sin of history, the killing of the Son of God, has become for us a happy fault that leads to the redemption. God saves the world using a killing as his raw material, using our unjust actions as his starting point. How much God can do with our sins! He can transform them into mission, making us fishers of men. “You were a person of unclean lips”, the Lord says to us. “Now, you are the one who can tell everyone about the Love of God”.


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