3-22-26: 5th Sunday of Lent Homily Podcast By  cover art

3-22-26: 5th Sunday of Lent Homily

3-22-26: 5th Sunday of Lent Homily

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5th Sunday of Lent 3-22-26 Year A On this fifth Sunday of Lent we hear the story of Lazarus. This is a story, not a parable, not a fable. It actually happened, in the town of Bethany, just a mile or two outside of Jerusalem. Jesus tells many parables during his public ministry, but he also performs many miracles. These miracles are not parables. Among His greatest miracles are three resuscitations. He raises the son of the widow of Nain from the dead and he raises the daughter of Jairus from the dead. And most incredibly, he raises Lazarus from the dead after he has been in a rock tomb for four days. This is Christ's miracle of miracles, one only surpassed by Christ raising himself from the dead after three days. The events we hear about today, a “sign” in the language of John’s gospel, directly precipitate Christ’s passion and death, which will take place in nearby Jerusalem shortly afterwards. The details of today’s gospel are interesting. Jesus receives the message that Lazarus is sick yet he remains for two days where he is with his disciples. Why does he stay two days? Why doesn't he hurry to the side of his friend who is sick? Because he wants the will of God to be manifested. He waits. He takes his time so that the natural course of events may be succeeded by the supernatural course of events. Only after he knows that Lazarus has died does he depart for Bethany. When Jesus arrives near Bethany he meets Martha and Mary, Lazarus' sisters, who question him and wonder why he did not come earlier “Lord if you had been here our brother would not have died.” Jesus shares their grief as they express this existential wonder. Where is God when someone is suffering? Where is God when somebody is about to die? People don't ask questions about God’s presence when someone wins the lottery. They don't wonder about the presence of God when they get a promotion at work. But we do ask about God when in the face of evil, in the face of wickedness. We want to know how bad things can happen when we’ve been told that God is so good. Jesus enters into the suffering of Martha and Mary in a deeply human and admirable way. It's easy to share joy. It requires nothing to bask in the sea of happiness at a crowded wedding reception. It's a joy to be joyful with the parents after a baby is born. But to share another’s grief is work, isn't it? When a friend is depressed, a sibling loses his or her job, or a colleague’s marriage fractures and they want to share their grief with us, it can be a challenge. Joy is naturally communal. Grief is deeply personal. Sorrow is just harder to share than joy. Jesus is empathetic. He feels and mirrors the sorrow of Martha and Mary because Lazarus was his friend too. It’s the family’s loss and His loss. And so the gospel tells us, in a very short verse, “Jesus wept.” A famous Hollywood movie might help us to re-imagine the story of Lazarus in a more modern and imaginative key. In the 1978 movie Superman with Christopher Reeve, Superman is emotionally very close to Lois Lane. Lois dies when an earthquake splits the earth and her car slowly sinks into a crevice. She struggles to escape but is suffocated by the earth spilling into her car. Superman is not there to save her. He is not at her side in her hour of need. He zooms through the sky to help her but arrives too late. He pulls her car from the crevice, removes her body, and gently lays Lois’ dead body on the dirt. He weeps. He is forlorn. If only he had been there. And then he does something only a man of his power could do. He rockets into outer space and undoes what has been done. He uncreates what has been created. He whips around the circumference of the globe with such speed and force that the world’s rotation reverses. And slowly the boulders climb back up the mountains. The large chunks of concrete of the Hoover dam reassemble themselves and the water reverses and crawls back into its lake. Superman reverses creation, and thus reverses time. The earthquake is undone. Time reverses as creation reverses. This imaginary episode is not totally crazy. The movie does not show Superman firing a supersonic laser to save Lois, or reaching into a special magic box, slipping through a black hole, or consulting universal psychic. He does something that seems to make some fanciful sense. To uncreate means to undo time. To go back in time means to restore a previous time. We believe that our God is outside of time. Our God is perfect and so is not subject to time. Time is a means for measuring change and change implies becoming better or becoming worse. Change implies more virtue or less virtue. More power or less power. But God can’t improve or decline, by definition. So there is no time where God is, which means that there is no clock in heaven. There is nothing to gauge in the land of God. God is Timeless, ...
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