Second Sunday of Lent
And as we hear the readings today, we get the comparison between the old man and the new man. St. Paul lays out one of the sins that is part and parcel of the old man: lust and fornication. St. Thomas Aquinas defines lust as seeking sexual pleasure not in accord with reason. And fornication, in its simplest form, is sexual relations between an unmarried man and unmarried woman, though more broadly it can refer to adultery (where at least one person is married) and other sexual sins.
There is no doubt that the sexual passions are strong. The old joke is told of a man asking a priest when he would no longer have to worry about lust. The priest answered, “Five minutes after you’re dead.” Our bodies, when they are not subjected to the soul, tend towards their own desires. Especially in youth, they operate as if the propagation of the human race depended entirely upon one’s self. And while one can have a legitimate desire to seek sexual pleasure that is in accord with reason (indeed, the gift of sexuality is a great gift from God), the old man, whose body, mind, and soul are not ordered properly and subjected in obedience to God, seeks simply to satisfy those desires whenever and however he wants.
And this is true even beyond lust and sexual desire. The old man, the disobedient Adam, always seeks his own will over and against God’s will, no matter what the subject matter. The old man spends money as he wants, without any reference to God; eats whatever he wants, without any reference to God; pursues whatever he wants, without any reference to God. In all these cases and more, God is, at best, an afterthought, and, at worst, not considered at all in one’s actions. The old man, St. Paul says, is earthly, and was addressed on Ash Wednesday: Remember, man, you are dust, and to dust you shall return.
But the Gospel we heard today, the Gospel of the Transfiguration, shows us what the new man can be. Christ receives transfiguration from the Father to show the three great Apostles what will happen after the Passion and Crucifixion. But that foresight connects to obedience, obedience to the Father’s will, no matter where that leads, even if it leads to the cross. Moses, who appears on Mount Tabor with the Lord and Elijah, also received a much smaller gift of transfiguration when he beheld God. His face radiated, so much so that people would have him cover it up because they were put off by it. Moses would only remove his veil when he entered the presence of God. But, St. Paul also says that it was a radiance that faded. Whereas the radiance God desires for us in heaven will never fade away, just as the radiance of Christ never fades away.
That radiance comes when we stop living like the old man, doing it “my way,” and when we, by the grace of God, open ourselves up to God’s transforming grace, His life, so that it begins to change us from the inside out. We start to transfigure when we do it God’s way. Sin blocks the light of Christ that we received at Holy Baptism from shining through us. Repentance, especially through the Sacrament of Penance, cleanses us from the mud of sin so that the light of Christ can shine through us and glorify God.
As far as our sexual passions go, living the life of the new man means treating our gift of sexuality as the precious gift it is, rather than simply a physical relief from stress or loneliness. Since we live in a GM city, the image of the gift of sexuality I use is like a new corvette. Most would care for it, protect it from misuse, and make sure no one is eating or drinking in or around the car. Misusing it would be to take it on two-track roads in a forest, or let kids eat ice cream in the back seat, or drive it through bogs. When we view things we shouldn’t, or try to simulate the sexual act on our own, or engage in acts of affection which are proper to marriage, or even engage in sexual acts as spouses that are not open to life (and I’m not talking about NFP, which cooperates with how God has made the human body to achieve or delay conception), we run our corvette through the mud. The more we put ourselves into temptation regarding our sexual faculties, the harder it is to get out of the mud. So we want to make sure that we are not allowing our sexual desires get the better of us as much as we can.
But, as I said, living a transfigured life isn’t only about sex. It’s also about being kind to a co-worker who puts us down; or being a friend to someone who is friendless, even if they are a little off; or not seeking undue attention and puffing ourselves up by bragging about our achievements; or treating even our enemies with human dignity and respect. Living the life of the new man is about asking what God wants us to do in this moment. And the more we practice it, the easier it becomes. As we think about the saints, for many of them towards the end of their life, living a Christ-centered life didn’t require as much effort, because they had trained themselves to think with the mind of Christ and love with His Sacred Heart.
We don’t have to live like the old man. We don’t have to fall to our passions and let them rule us. That is the precious gift we were given in baptism. So, to quote the last verse of Toby Keith’s song: “When he rides up on his horse / And you feel that cold bitter wind / Look out your window and smile / Don’t let the old man in.” In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.