To read the texts click on the texts: Ezek37:12-14; Rom 8:8-11; Jn 11:1-45
Why
do we keep visiting the old and infirm and those in hospitals when we have no
miracle drug to take away their pain? Why do we commit ourselves to the
political process when there is so much cynicism and a malaise of despair in
politics today? Why does the Church through her priests, religious and laity
continue to reach out to those in need despite the tremendous opposition by
vested interests and the attempts at destruction of those works by those who
cannot bear to see the poor get their due and rights? The prime reason is
because we continue to believe that God is still in charge, that he is still in
control and that with his help and hope in him we will overcome.
“The
smell of death is everywhere. The pictures you see on TV do not tell the whole
story. You only see the devastation in those pictures. But when you are here,
you not only see the devastation, but you smell it, no matter where you go or
what you do.” Those who visited the tsunami disaster areas described the scene
in this way time after time. The very smell of death permeated the air. This
could also be a description of what Ezekiel may have felt when the Lord
challenged him to see that he would open the graves of the dead of Israel and
restore them to life again. Yet, the Lord did indeed act in accord with his
word and life was restored. Death which is the absence of the breath of God’s
spirit was transformed to life by the life giving spirit of God. Ezekiel realized
that there was no limit to God’s power to save and that everything was possible
for God. He continued to hope and communicated this hope to all of Israel. Even
in exile in Babylon, Israel must not give in to despair, but hope. The Psalmist
expresses this hope in the Lord. He is so confident of the mercy of God and his
power to redeem that even from the depths of despair he knows that the Lord
will hear his cry for help.
Martha,
the sister of Lazarus, despite her verbal acceptance of Jesus as the Resurrection
and the Life, did not expect that her brother would be raised and brought back
to life again. This is why when Jesus asks for the stone to be removed from the
tomb, her focus is the smell of death. The reason for Jesus’ great distress was
not because of the insincerity of the mourners, nor because the people did not
believe that he was the source of life and stood among them, not even because
he was forced to perform a miracle in public with the crowd present, but in all
probability because of what sin and death had done to humanity. They had
succeeded in robbing humanity of hope. The tears that Jesus sheds, while being
an acknowledgement of what sin and death are capable of doing, are not tears of
despair. Physical death is indeed difficult to accept, but it surely is not the
end. Thus, we are not asked not to weep, but only not to give in to despair,
not to lose hope.
However
tempting it might be, however human, however understandable, hopeless despair
is not a Christian way of living. However painful our current circumstances,
and however agonizing our honest questions—about job loss, wayward children,
financial disaster, chronic sickness, destruction of works and institutions
that have been painstakingly built, false allegations made by vested interests—ultimately
things will get worse, for nothing can compare to the horrible specter of death
that awaits us all. But Christian faith believes that God in Christ will
conquer and transform even that ultimate enemy death.
Paul’s
letter to the Romans talks about the same Spirit of God that gives life. He explains that the same Spirit that raised
Jesus from the dead lives in us and is responsible for giving us life.
As
we near the end of Lent, we are being reminded that God’s Spirit is the source
of our life as a community. We are not
only being prepared for Christ’s resurrection but our own.
We
can make some choices about how we get to Easter. We can choose not to focus on the things of
the world that distract us and drain our life from us. We can choose to resist loving or accepting
some more than others because they are different or think differently. We can deny those things that satisfy a sense
of artificial power based on material things. We can choose to nurture a sense
that we are individually more important than who we are together, as a family.
Or
we can be restored by allowing the Spirit of God to give us life. We can choose to live as Jesus lived. We can live our call to be a community of
faith focused on the strength of our unity.
We can give ourselves over to be restored by letting those things that
separate us from God and each other die and be resurrected in Spirit to life as
faithful believers. The choice rests with us.
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