Lent can
feel something like a spiritual spring clean, and that’s no bad thing. We, all
of us, need opportunities for repentance, to turn away from sin, and to return
to the Lord Our God. In this morning’s Gospel we see Jesus in quite an
uncompromising mood: this is no ‘Gentle Jesus, meek and mild’ but rather here
is the righteous anger of the prophets, a sign that all is not well in the
world.
When Moses receives the Ten
Commandments from God on Mt Sinai the first is ‘I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of
the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery; you shall have no other gods
before me.’ Could it be that the temple traders in their desire to
profit from people’s religious observance have broken this first commandment?
The temptation to have power, to be concerned above all else with worldly
things: money, power, success, and influence, are still a huge temptation for
the Church and the world. We may not mean to, but we do, and while we think of
God as loving and merciful, we forget about righteous anger, and our need to
repent, to turn away from our sins – the desire to control others and to be so
caught up on the ways of the world that we lose sight of who and what we are,
and what we are supposed to do and be.
The Jews demand a sign, and Christ
prophesies that if they destroy this temple then he will raise it up in three
days: he looks to his death and resurrection to show them where true worship
lies – in the person of Jesus Christ. Christians should be concerned with a
relationship, our relationship with God, and with each other. Likewise Christians
can all too easily forget that Jesus said ‘I have come not to abolish the law
and the prophets but to fulfill them’. The Ten Commandments are not abolished by
Christ, or set aside, but rather his proclamation of the Kingdom and Repentance
show us that we still need to live these out in our lives, to show that we
honour God and live our lives accordingly. In his cleansing of the Temple
Christ looks to the Cross and to the Resurrection, a stumbling-block to Jews,
obsessed with the worship of the Temple, and foolishness to Gentiles who cannot
believe that God could display such weakness, such powerlessness. Instead this supreme
demonstration of God’s love for us, shocking and scandalous though it is, is a
demonstration of the utter, complete, self-giving love of God, for the sake of
you and me – miserable sinners who deserve condemnation, but who instead are
offered love and mercy to heal us and restore us.
When we are confronted with this we
should be shocked – that God loves us enough to do this, to suffer and die for
us, to save us from our sins, and from the punishment that is rightly ours. We
do not deserve it, that’s the point. But we are offered it in Christ so that we
might become something other than we are, putting away the ways of the world,
of power and money, selfishness and sin, to have new life in and through Him.
To live is to change and to be
perfect is to have changed often. If we are changing into Jesus Christ, then
we’re on the right track. If we listen to his word in Scripture; if we talk to
him in prayer and let him talk to us; if we’re fed by Him and with Him in the
Eucharist, by Christ who is both priest and victim, so that we might become
what He is – God; if we’re forgiven by Him, through making confession of our
sins, not only do we come to understand Jesus, we become like him, we come to
share in his divine nature, you, me, all of humanity ideally. We, the People of
God, the new humanity, enter into the divine fullness of life, we have a
foretaste of the heavenly banquet – we are prepared to enter the new life of
the Kingdom, and to live it.
Lent should be something of a
spiritual spring clean, asking God to drive out all that should not be there,
preparing for the joy of Easter, to live the Risen Life, filled with God’s
grace. In our baptism we died with Christ and were raised to new life in the
Spirit. Let us prepare to live that life, holding fast to Our Lord and Saviour,
clinging to the teachings of his body, the Church. Let us turn away from the
folly of this world, the hot air, and focus on the true and everlasting joy of
heaven, which awaits us, who are bought by his blood, washed in it, fed with
it. Let us proclaim it in our lives so that others may believe so that all may
praise the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, to whom be ascribed as is most
right and just, all might, majesty, glory, dominion, and power, now and forever...
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