Homily for Ash Wednesday: March 6th, 2019.
The English author, G. K. Chesterton
says: AThe soul does not die by sin, but by
impenitence.@ More deadly than sin itself is the
refusal to acknowledge sin, and to repent of it. Repentance is at the beginning
of every Mass.
It is also how we begin Lent.
ALord, have mercy,@ we pray. When we appeal to God, we
are acknowledging that we can never get rid of sin on our own. Sin is like
addiction. Part of the reason for the success of Alcoholics Anonymous in
dealing with the addiction to alcohol is the spiritual soundness of the first
two of its twelve points:
1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol C that our lives had become
unmanageable.
2. We came to believe that a Power greater
than our own could restore us to sanity.
As we begin Lent, therefore, we
confess our powerlessness and appeal to the only power that can make us whole.
Do we realize how counter-cultural that is? The self-help books all tell us
that we=re not powerless. We can do it on our own. We can get our act
together. The only thing we lack is self-confidence. In confessing our sins we
are not asking for an increase of self-confidence. Instead we appeal to God for
mercy. Prayer for God=s mercy is one petition which is always certain of a favorable
response.
AA clean heart create for me, O God,@ we prayed in the responsorial
psalm. Cleanliness is not something
grim. Nor is the repentance which leads to cleanliness. It is liberating B and joyful. One of the most
beautiful things in married life is the ability to say, AI=m sorry,@ and to hear the words, AI forgive you.@
Beautiful as human forgiveness is,
however, it is only a pale shadow of God=s forgiveness. When we forgive, there
is always a memory of the wrong or injury done B a skeleton in the closet, we call
it. God doesn=t have any closets, and if he did
there would certainly not be any skeletons in them. God=s forgiveness is total. In the Old
Testament book of the prophet Isaiah we hear God saying: AThough your sins be like scarlet,
they may become white as snow@ (1:18). And later in the book God says: AI wipe out your offenses; your sins I
remember no more.@ (43:25). That, friends, is the gospel, the good news. We
don’t need to drag after us an ever lengthening tale of guilt. When we truly repent,
God forgives: totally and completely.
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