Sermon for the Third Sunday in Lent, 2:00 pm service for Atlantic Ministry of the Deaf

by CCW | 23 March 2014 17:00

“Behold, we go up to Jerusalem”

The idea of life as a journey is a common yet compelling metaphor. It signifies a sense of purpose and indicates a sense of direction. But not all journeys are the same. Lent would remind us of the essential character of the Christian journey.

The journey is the pilgrimage of the soul to God and it is a pilgrimage with God. The end is union with God and God makes our way to him with us. We are apt to forget how remarkable this really is. There is our human desiring, on the one hand, our quest for God, the odyssey of the human soul, as it were, but there is, on the other hand, the divine desiring, that is to say, God’s will for us.

The journey is the way of sacrifice, to be sure, but it portends the greater accomplishment, the discovery of our part in the body of Christ. What has to be forsaken is our continual tendency to mistake the part for the whole or to deny everything else except our own self-will. Such are the disorders of sin which result in suffering and death, in the experience of the wilderness of suffering and despair. Yet, the journey does not deny the realities of sin and suffering but makes the way of pilgrimage through them. This is the marvel and the wonder of redemptive love. We are called to be those “in whose heart are the pilgrim ways;/ who going through the Vale of Misery use it for a well,” the well of blessings.

That is why the journey is the way of suffering. Our way to God passes through the ways of our rejection of God. Our way to God is the way of redemptive suffering in which the disorders of our souls – our disordered loves – are set in order. The disciplines of Lent are altogether about this. They don’t involve a flight from the world and the extinguishing of our desires so much as they intend “the setting of love in order”. They embrace the three essential characteristics of the Christian pilgrimage: the way of purgation; the way of illumination; and the way of perfection or union.

The way of purgation intends the removal of all that stands between us and God, the removal of sin and wickedness. It means the casting away of all that stands between us and God in order to will what God wants for us. The way of purgation is a fundamental part of that way. God’s will to be reconciled with us has to be realised in our lives, in the pattern of the death and resurrection of Jesus. There has to be the constant recalling of that divine will for us, the continual renewal of our souls in love, and, of course, our perseverance in this pattern of life.

The way of illumination intends our greater understanding of the will of God, the opening of our eyes to see the workings of God’s will. Lent reminds us of the importance of the reading and study of God’s Word, for “thy word is a light unto my path”.

The way of union reminds us that our end is with God and that God is with us in the way of our journeying. The perfecting of our wills is accomplished in the union of our wills with God’s will. He goes the way of suffering for us and with us.

“All things that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of man shall be accomplished,” Jesus says. What are all those things? They are the things of sin and salvation. Jesus tells us what these things are in very graphic and concrete terms; he speaks of his passion, his death and resurrection. And yet, it seems, we don’t get it. We don’t understand at first; these things are hidden from our eyes even in his telling us of them. What will it take? Somehow we have to go through them; somehow we have to see them in the form of the crucified Christ. Yet it is wanted that we should come to understand and that our love should be set afire by what we are given to understand through the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He goes this way for us. But he goes this way so that we might understand and love all the more.

In the gospel, Jesus heals the blind man who wouldn’t shut up, that is to say, he called out incessantly to Jesus for mercy. He receives his sight and went about glorifying God. Jesus is the one in whom the love of God restores us to the vision of glory. Such is the purpose of Lent. The journey is the pilgrimage of love. It is our journey with God in Christ.

Jesus wants us to go with him in the way of his sacrifice for us, the way of purgation, illumination, and union. Lent would remind us of the essential elements of our Christian pilgrimage. It is the way to God but only through the love which purges, illumines, and perfects.

“Behold we go up to Jerusalem”

Fr. David Curry
AMD Lent 3, 2014

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