“Just as the serpent was taken, and—as the problem—was made into the antidote: the serpent was made the way to heal the snakebites, so Jesus, the sinless one, was made to be like sin. He enters the places of separation, sin, and suffering, darkness and death, so that he can undo and heal them.”
4th Sunday of Lent, Year B
Sin and
Serpents
It’s
Laetare Sunday.
That’s
why I am up here in this beautiful rose vestment. You expect that twice a year.
Laetare,
as you know, is a word that means “rejoice” in Latin. This is one of our two
great “rejoicing Sundays”. We are over halfway through the season of Lent, and
so we rejoice.
But what
exactly do we rejoice in, in Lent?
It’s
still…a sad season, right? It’s still a season of penance. It’s the season
where we are with Jesus in the desert, and we are preparing for even sadder
things yet to come in Holy Week.
So what
do we rejoice in, in the season of Lent?
The
answer is “mercy”. We are rejoicing in God’s mercy.
Because
if we didn’t have God’s mercy, we wouldn’t have anything to celebrate in this
season of Lent. We wouldn’t even be looking forward to something at the end of
this period of penance.
Take out
your missalettes.
All the
readings today have a sense of rejoicing….in the Father’s mercy. Turn to page
73, to the start with our second reading, Paul to the Ephesians.
Look at
very first line:
Brothers
and sisters: God, who is rich in mercy,
<<the
reason to rejoice is that He is rich in mercy>>
God, who
is rich in mercy, because of the great love he had for us, even when we were
dead in our transgressions, brought us to life with Christ — by grace you have
been saved —
We are
rejoicing.
Why are
we rejoicing?
Because
of his mercy.
What
about his mercy, specifically?
Because
we were dead in our transgressions, but by grace we have been saved...
And he
adds:
“raised
us up with him, and seated us with him in the heavens in Christ Jesus.”
So that’s
the summary: there is joy in his mercy.
How does
God’s love and mercy work?
Really it
works on two levels: One, before we could sin, and another after we have
sinned.
The first
gift of God’s mercy is that he even lets us have free will.
Now, we
probably all have thought before: Boy, that was a bad idea. Why did God give us
that? That has only caused trouble. Free will always led to stupid stuff. If he
just would’ve made us always love and worship Him things would be great.
Instead
we have free will; we do dumb stuff; and then it hurts.
You
probably think of that then you look at your toddlers too. Aww, they are just
getting their own sprit…and now they are wrecking the house. And now you are
going to have to curb their free will.
That
then—the problems of free will—tie in with our other readings too.
Look at
the first reading:
A longish
one.
God gave
the people free will.
And again
and again with their free will they go the wrong way.
First
paragraph:
“They
added infidelity to infidelity, practicing all the abominations of the nations
and polluting the LORD’s temple.”
So God
tries to change their direction, using their free will and better judgment.
“Early
and often did the LORD, the God of their fathers,
send his
messengers to them, for he had compassion on his people and his dwelling place.
But they mocked the messengers of God, despised his warnings, and scoffed at
his prophets, until the anger of the LORD against his people was so inflamed
that there was no remedy.”
So God
acted by another means: Less enjoyable; using less of their own free will.
“Their
enemies burnt the house of God, tore down the walls of Jerusalem, set all its
palaces afire, and destroyed all its precious objects.”
So, he
loves them enough to let them make their own choices; they make bad choices,
despite his attempts to turn them, but then we see God gives his mercy to them
a second time.
Jump over
to second column there:
(We’ve
talked about this prophecy the first two weekends in Lent.)
They are
in exile, but there is a promise of return in 70 years:
As was
spoken to Jeremiah the prophet: “Until the land has retrieved its lost
sabbaths, during all the time it lies waste it shall have rest while seventy
years are fulfilled.”
So,
seventy years of waiting, seventy years of healing, seventy years of being out
of the holy land, but then God shows his mercy.
And he
fulfills this through a pagan.
Final
paragraph, second line: “in order to fulfill the word of the LORD spoken by
Jeremiah, the LORD inspired King Cyrus of Persia to issue this proclamation
throughout his kingdom…”
The
proclamation says that he will rebuild Jerusalem and its temple and they can
all go home to Judah.
They had
abused the free will God gave them, wasted his mercy when He gave them second
chances, and yet God comes back with
an even greater mercy.
Flip to
the Gospel, page 74
We see
mercy again, on the largest scale possible.
We all know
John chapter 3 as the home of the famous line: “For God so loved the world that
he gave his only Son...”
We know
that. We see it at football games, basketball games… It might be the one
chapter and verse that Catholics can quote—John 3:16.
The context
though is: there were bad things coming our way.
We had
all sinned and gone stray like wayward sheep and God had to bring us back.
To help
understand truth, look right before that, at the beginning of the passage:
Jesus
said to Nicodemus: “Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must
the Son of Man be lifted up, so that everyone who believes in him may have
eternal life.”
Jesus is
making an allusion to a very particular act of rebellion by Israel, which would
make any hearer of John 3:16 realize that the famous passage had to with the
price of sin and disobedience.
Back in
the Book of Numbers, during their 40 years of wandering in the desert, because
the Israelites have free will—because they can sin—they do.
They
complain against the Lord: “Why has God abandoned us? Why has he brought us out
to this terrible place?”
So God
sends venomous serpents to bite and punish them.
The
people are rebelling; they use their free will to oppose him.
God, in a
sense, lets their biting, rebellious speech become—if you will—incarnate, in
the form of these serpents that attack the people.
The
people repent and come to Moses and beg his help, and he intercedes for them
and God says: I will be merciful.
Take
bronze, make a serpent, twist it around a staff, and lift that bronze serpent
up in this desert and anyone who looks on the serpent on the pole will be
healed.
So what
did God do?
He took
the problem: serpents. And out of that he fashions a remedy: this bronze
serpent lifted up on a staff.
That is
the image Jesus wants us to have in mind when we read “So must the Son of Man
be lifted up.”
God has
established a pattern of how he fixes things: Something is wrong; people have
messed up. God is going to take the thing that is wrong itself and flip it and
make it the remedy.
Think
about how a vaccination or immunization works: You take the disease itself, the
bacteria, and you use it to make the body defeat the disease.
To
understand this better, flip back to page 59. This is the readings of Ash Wednesday.
Often we are distracted by all the other stuff that day, but it contains a
fascinating line in 2nd Corinthians.
5th line
down: “For our sake he made him to be sin who did not know sin, so that we
might become the righteousness of God in him.”
Repeat:
“For our sake he made him to be sin who did not know sin.”
Jesus did
not know sin, right? He alone is sinless. But God made him “to be sin.”
What does
that mean?
God let
him enter into the space where we have been. Sin is being cut off from God.
What is Jesus like on the Cross? “My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
He feels,
he experiences the reality of sin.
He feels
it by suffering for us.
He has all
our sins dumped upon him as Isaiah 53 says.
He feels
that distance, that separation.
He is in
the place of sin suffering and death—as human beings would be.
He has quote/unquote
“become sin”
And what
exactly is this “when he is lifted up from the earth”?
On the
cross.
Just as
the serpent was taken, and—as the problem—was made into the antidote: the
serpent was made the way to heal the snakebites, so Jesus, the sinless one, was
made to be like sin. He enters the places of separation, sin, and suffering, darkness
and death, so that he can undo and heal them.
He goes
into those. He becomes the way to heal us of sin, because he becomes it, as it
were.
He
becomes our safeguard from suffering and death by himself going through them.
So these
are the mercies we sing on Laetare Sunday.
As the
psalmist says in psalm 89: “I will sing of the mercies of the Lord forever.”
The mercy
that lets us choose. And even if we choose poorly, the mercy that comes back to
save us.
The mercy
that says even though the people went astray I will bring you back to the
promised land.
And which
says to us: When you stray away even farther, when you as a human race are all
lost in sin, he says “I so love the world that I will send my only begotten son
that he will become sin in your place,” that what was once separated and dark
and dead can now be alive and in the light with me.
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