“What are you giving up?” (St. Luke’s: Friday, Feb. 16th, 2018; Isaiah 58.1-9; Ps. 51; St. Matthew 9.14-15)
This time,
things will be different. I have a good friend
who purchases lottery tickets in a quasi-religious
manner. For years now, this person has
not gone a single week without buying a ticket in the hope of hitting the
jackpot. It is said that Albert Einstein
defined insanity as follows: “doing
the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result”. Of course, every now and then, someone does purchase a winning ticket. Watching the media coverage of the presentation
of the larger-than-life check to the lucky winner is torture for my friend. As
Gore Vidal said, “Whenever a friend of
mine succeeds, a little something in me dies”. It’s extremely frustrating to see someone else walk away with the prize that you have
been hoping to win for so long. Then
again, long-ingrained habits are hard to break… (by the way, today’s LottoMAX
jackpot is 55 million $). So, once again,
it’s Lent. Will this year be any different?
Are we expecting any kind of result from our efforts to draw close to
the Lord during these 40 days?
Freedom
& frustration. Today’s first
reading reflects the frustration of
God’s people following the return from
exile in Babylon. After having destroyed
the city of Jerusalem along with the temple of Yahweh, and having exiled the
population of the kingdom of Judah, the Babylonians had themselves tasted the bitterness of defeat – at the hands of the
Persian Empire. The Persian emperor,
Cyrus, gave permission to those Jewish exiles who so desired to return to their
homeland. This was a “get-out-of-jail-free-card”
…with a twist. The way was clear to return to Jerusalem – but
what was there to return to? What awaited those Jews brave enough to
undertake the long journey home was a smouldering pile of rubble, hostile
neighbours and no guarantees that the next empire to rule the Near East would
be as friendly as the Persians had been. The invitation extended to the exiles to leave
the land of their captivity in order to return home was a challenge to lay everything on the line in the hope of rebuilding
their ancestral city – as well as starting their lives over, from scratch. Most of the Jewish exiles balked at the
prospect of uprooting themselves and hitting the road… again. Most thought that Babylon was as good a place as any to make a life,
and they decided to remain where they were. However, a small number of exiles seized the
opportunity to go back to Jerusalem; they rose to the challenge in the hope
that perhaps Yahweh’s promises to Abraham would indeed be realized. With that dream in their hearts, they took to
the road their ancestor had travelled 15 centuries before; they retraced
Abraham’s steps …from Babylonia to the Promised Land.
It’s not
working. Against all
odds, the brave returnees had rebuilt the Temple as well as the walls of
Jerusalem. They had settled into the
routine of work and worship, of family and faith. And yet, something
wasn’t right. There was a common sentiment
that God wasn’t paying attention: “Why do we fast, and you do not see it? Afflict
ourselves, and you take no note of it?” (Is. 58.3a). The Temple was rebuilt, sacrifices were being
offered, priests had been consecrated for service in the house of God, the
Feasts and Fasts were being observed, and still, there was a frustrating feeling of Yahweh’s …absence.
Surely, they were doing everything properly; what was wrong? Why wasn’t it working? Where
was the payoff? Faced with the people’s
frustration, the prophet Isaiah offers an explanation of the situation. Our reading today is an example of the perennial
challenge of the prophets to God’s people down through the ages: the call to eliminate
the discrepancy between our way of worshipping and our way of life; between our liturgical
gestures and our attitudes;
between what we say and who we are. Now that we’re all uncomfortable, let us
proceed. Instead of standing in stark
contrast to each other, our worship and our lives should reflect each other and
inform each other. This is the challenge
to integrity – to an alignment of our
beliefs with our behaviour. Of course, in
spite of what we may say, it is our actions
that demonstrate what we truly
believe, deep down.
Don’t
frustrate freedom. Isaiah puts his
finger on the problem:
“…on your fast day you carry out your own pursuits, and
drive all your laborers. Yes, your fast
ends in quarreling and fighting” (Is. 58.3b).
God’s people were observing the fast days all right – however,
besides having given up eating, it was
business as usual. The bottom line was being kept in full view. Crops needed to be sown, harvests gathered, the
fields needed ploughing. However, since
it was a fast, the laborers had to work on empty stomachs. The image that Isaiah offers to illustrate the
situation is that of the laborers being
yoked together like cattle and driven to do their work. What was supposed to be an occasion of drawing
near to the God of freedom had become
a moment of oppression. Things had gotten twisted around – the fast
was making things worse, not better.
The
choice. What are you giving up for Lent? This is a question that we may have been asked
recently. Lent is a time for
re-examining our priorities. What motivations
are driving us? At the beginning of Flannery O’Connor’s 1960 novel,
The Violent Bear it Away, the main
character – a teenaged boy named “Francis Tarwater” – is busy digging a grave
for his recently deceased uncle. As the
boy labors under the hot sun, a “stranger” appears and strikes up a
conversation with him. What is he going
to do with his life now that he finds himself alone, now that his guardian (and
authority figure) is dead? As the
dialogue draws to a close, Francis mutters to himself: “I guess that’s it then –
it’s either Jesus or the Devil”; to which the stranger replies “No, the choice
is not between Jesus and the Devil; the choice is between Jesus and you”. There it
is – in all its stark simplicity; as yesterday’s Gospel put it, either you do your own thing, or you take up
the cross. So, what are you giving
up for Lent? The challenge of Isaiah is
addressed to all of us – as it turns out, the challenge is to give up …yourself. Stop chasing your own pursuits and go after God’s pursuits; in other words, take
care of those around you who are in need. Free
the oppressed; feed the hungry; shelter the homeless; clothe the naked (cf. Mt. 25.31-46) and “don’t
turn your back on your own”. Who are
those people whom God has entrusted to our care? Who are those people who look to us for a listening
ear, who trust us to be present with them in their solitude? If his people put aside their own pursuits
and pursue justice, Yahweh promises them healing, light, vindication and …his presence. This is the way to truly fast, the way to make our voice heard on high (cf. Is. 58.4).
“Then your light shall break
forth like the dawn,
and your wound shall quickly
be healed…
Then you shall call, and the
LORD will answer,
you shall cry for help, and
he will say: Here I am!” (Is. 58.8-9).
This is the
promise for those who are willing to lose themselves;
they will find God. Amen.
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