Today
is traditionally called Quadragesima
Sunday, the ancient beginning of the 40-day season of Lent (called Quadragesima in Latin). Of course, our
contemporary Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, but Ash Wednesday and the four extra
days that follow were a later addition to the original Lenten season, which
actually still starts counting the 40 days today, ending on the Thursday before
Easter. This Sunday’s importance in the liturgical calendar is highlighted by
the fact that the Roman stational church for today is the Basilica of Saint
John Lateran, the “Mother Church” of Rome, the Pope’s official “cathedral.”
Dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, Rome’s Lateran Basilica seems an
especially appropriate place to recall Christ’s 40-day fast in the desert!
But
before we get to the desert, the Church today takes us all the way back to the
beginning – to the garden. The Lord God planted
a garden in Eden, in the east, and placed there the man whom he had formed
– formed, incidentally, out of the clay
of the ground, the same ground out of which God made the various trees and, a little later, the various wild animals and various birds of
the air. The story is a familiar one. So we are apt to let it gently pass
over us (in one ear and out the other, as the saying goes). But its presence
and prominence in this Lenten liturgy suggests that would be a mistake. It’s a
story, to be sure, but more like a meditation, a study in story-form of who we
are and what we’re about.
In
this story that says so much, we learn that our very life itself is a gift. So
too is the world, which we are not the owners of, but more like tenants. And,
if our changing climate has highlighted how the damage we humans have done has
made the world less of a garden and more like a desert, the story obviously has
something to say about that too!
In
the middle of the garden grows a tree – the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, which we soon learn is a kind of
boundary, not to be touched, let alone eaten from. It’s a reminder that we human beings did not
make the world, we don’t own it, and we are not supposed to be completely in
charge.
Neither
is the smart, cunning serpent, the
tempter, who acts as if he were in charge and whom tradition treats as a figure
for the devil – the same Satan who will tempt Jesus in the desert, pretending
there to be in charge of all the kingdoms
of the world in their magnificence.
The
devil is a liar, a subtle, cunning
liar, a figure for our time if ever there was one. if we listen to him, then – as Pope Francis warns us in
his Message for Lent – ‘we risk sinking into the abyss of absurdity, and
experiencing hell here on earth, as all too many tragic events in the personal
and collective human experience sadly bear witness.’
Superficially,
what the serpent says to Eve is true. Adam and Eve do not die – at least not
right away. And their eyes will be opened
to know what is good and what is evil.
But, when what the tempter promises actually happens, then we quickly see how
well we have been deceived!
True
Adam and Eve did not die right away, but die they did. Through one man, Saint Paul says, sin entered the world, and through sin, death, and thus death came to
all. The same ground we once came from, originally filled with the
Creator’s breath of life, to that
same ground we must, on account of sin, return now in death – as we were so famously
reminded ritually this past Ash Wednesday, when we were told again: Remember, you are dust, and to dust you will
return!
As
so often happens with our limited Lectionary, the 1st reading ends
abruptly. Adam and Eve try to repair the damage they have done by making
themselves clothes – in effect hiding from one another. They will soon also try
to hide from God, for the tempter had taught them to think of God as an enemy,
as an oppressor. But, as the story continues, God does not desert them nor
abandon them to their guilt. That’s good news. And it looks ahead, looks
forward, to the even bigger and better news Saint Paul proclaims in the 2nd
reading. But the gift is not like the
transgression. For if by the transgression of the one, the many died, how much
more did the grace of God and the gracious gift of the one man Jesus Christ
overflow for the many.
Thanks
to Adam’s sin, the garden has become a desert. That is where we find ourselves
now, and so is where we encounter the devil – just as Jesus did. But, because
Jesus has himself already defeated the devil, our own victory over Satan is
already in sight. For just as through the
disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so, through the
obedience of the one, the many will be made righteous.
Every Lent, the Church
invites us to break our routine and do something we usually seem so reluctant
to do – to take an honest and critical look at ourselves - at where we are,
where we are going, where we would like to be going, and how hope to get there.
Homily for the 1st Sunday of Lent, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville TN, March 1, 2020.
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