Fourth Sunday of Lent
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. Sometimes we have Scripture passages that we really like, that “hit us in the feels” or that motivate us to follow Christ more deeply. Other times there are Scripture passages with which we struggle, which seem harder to digest. And perhaps St. Paul’s epistle today is one of the latter.
What the Apostle speaks of today is how God saves us. And this was and is a rather big point in how we view salvation, which still challenges us today. Both in the Epistle to the Galatians and in the Epistle to the Romans, St. Paul outlines how the law doesn’t save, but existed as a tutor to help us grow in holiness. It didn’t gain for us salvation. And the Apostle to the Gentiles shares how no one, once God gave the law, ever lived up to all its 613 precepts perfectly.
Christ came and gave us a new law, one that built upon the old law, but surpassed it, as much as light surpasses shadow and reality surpasses sign. Christ fulfilled the law perfectly, and even took upon Himself the punishment or curse due to those who did not follow the law, as the law says, “Cursed be he who hangs on a tree,” and Christ allowed Himself to be hung on the tree of the cross so that He could take away the curse from us and grant us everlasting life. This new law is seen especially in Matthew, chapter five, as Christ, the New Moses, gives us the Beatitudes and reinterprets the law to go beyond simply “Thou shalt not,” and move into the positive area of blessings and fulness of life. These are the teachings, “You have heard it said…but I say to you…”. The fulfillment of the law that Christ talks about is, from the point of action, much more difficult, as it’s easier to not murder someone than it is not to hold anger in the heart, or not to have sex with someone other than your spouse than it is to avoid even lustful glances at others.
But, going deeper, the dichotomy that St. Paul points out between the covenant of Sinai and the covenant of Calvary points to a more profound difference: do we save ourselves or is salvation a gift? If the law saves, then salvation is something that I achieve for myself. I may ask God for help; I may lean on others to support me in following each commandment, but I am the main actor in my salvation. On the other hand, if Christ saves me, then I have a part to play in my salvation, but it is a supporting role, not the lead in the movie. And if Christ saves me, then if I mess up, it doesn’t mean salvation is lost to me necessarily. It simply means that I have temporarily interrupted salvation. But if I save myself and I do not fulfill the requirements of the law, then there is no hope for me; I have spent my chance for redemption and have nothing but despair for my eternal future.
This is the good news of salvation: salvation doesn’t depend on me! And, at least as far as I, personally, am concerned, that’s great news! Because I don’t always do the good I intend, and I sometimes do the bad I do not intend to do. The freedom comes from knowing that I am not my own savior, so I don’t have to act as if everything depends on me. Because it doesn’t. If everything depends on me, then I am in slavery, striving with all of who I am to follow a law that I am bound to break at one time or another.
So, the Law does not save. Christ saves. And thanks be to God for that. But does that mean that I can forget the Ten Commandments? Does that mean that my choices don’t matter? Of course not. Again, the new law of freedom means we act in a certain way that goes even beyond the old law. Christ has won for us salvation, so that we don’t have to earn it (because we can’t earn it). But in order to receive that gift of salvation, we still have to follow Christ and conform ourselves to Him. Because really, being in heaven is a matter of being united to Christ. If we are united to Christ, then heaven is the logical destination for us because Christ is already there and we are joined to Christ. But, if we sever ourselves from Christ by doing things that are contradictory to who Christ is, then we cannot hope to be in heaven because Christ is in heaven and we have separated ourselves from Him.
So we still do our best to avoid: having other false gods; taking God’s name in vain; working on the sabbath (the Lord’s Day, now, rather than Saturday); disobeying our parents; murdering others; committing adultery; stealing; lying; and coveting our neighbor’s spouse or goods. And we even go beyond that. We ask God to help us avoid: even other swear words, wrath, lustful thoughts; to be content with what we have, mean what we say, and not give in to envy. But we do so as our response to what God has done for us, not trying to earn His love or eternal salvation. While we can still reject salvation, our salvation is not up to us, in the end; Christ has already accomplished it for us. We merely need to show that we want it (which sometimes is a bit of challenge because of our fallen nature). But God also gives us the Eucharist, the true Flesh and Blood of our Risen Lord, to help conform us to Christ and to strengthen us so that we can choose salvation and reject damnation. May our worthy reception of the Body and Blood of Christ today and each time we go to Mass help us to choose the freedom that is ours in Christ, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.