Fourth Sunday of Lent
Just as the cadets have to keep their eyes on the goal of becoming a Trooper, the Church sets before us today the goal of making it to heaven. For the gradual today we pray Psalm 121: “I rejoiced when they said to me: let us go to the house of the Lord.” For the tract we heard Psalm 124: “Those who trust in the Lord are like Mount Zion, that stands forever.” And we will return to Psalm 121 at the Communion Antiphon, as we hear: “Jerusalem is built as a city, strongly compact. It is there that the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord.” Of course, while the psalmist had the earthly Jerusalem in mind, God, the divine author, had the Jerusalem above in mind. We rejoice because we go on pilgrimage through life towards heaven. And when we trust in the Lord, nothing can shake us, because we are like heaven, which endures even as the ages pass.
St. Paul, in his epistle to the Galatians, also references the Jerusalem above, which is like Isaac, whereas Sinai, the mountain of the law, references the earthly reality. The Apostle challenges us not simply to look to the rules, but to the freedom that comes from allowing God’s grace to transform us, and the freedom that comes from conforming our wills to God’s. During our Lenten pilgrimage, we do well to keep this in mind. Our goal should not just be not eating meat on Fridays, or certain extra prayers, or generosity to the Church and the poor through almsgiving. Those practices, like the law, do not save in and of themselves. But when we utilize those penitential practices to live a life more like Christ, that is, allowing those practices to put to death in us anything that does not come from God, we gain freedom because we live as God created us: in accordance with His will.
It can be so easy to keep the law mentality that St. Paul critiques in the epistle. We set out penances for ourselves and presume that they will save us. We take on a Pelagian mentality that we earn our salvation by the good works we do, and God simply approves of our struggle and rewards us for it. But our penitential practices, like the law, does not save. Christ saves us; we do not save ourselves. But we follow God’s eternal law and we chastise ourselves with Lenten practices in order to discipline our flesh and realize that all too often we live more like an animal, by instinct and drive, than like a child of God, living by following the will of God and the higher ends of the spiritual realm.
We don’t teach, like the Manichaeans, that the body is evil, but we do know that it operates under the weight of sin and concupiscence, and desires things we should not desire, or desires things at inopportune times. We strive to live, not just by bread, but by the Word of God. We pray because we need communion with the Father to ignore the temptations of the devil. We give alms because generosity with others, especially those who will not return payment, makes us more like our heavenly Father who makes the sun shine on the good and the bad, and makes the rain fall on the just and the unjust.
And just like the cadets not only have to work out to be able to do their push-ups, sit-ups, and run, but also have to eat well to stay in shape, we hear the miracle of the multiplication of the loaves and fish in today’s Gospel, which starts out the famous Bread of Life discourse, which is St. John’s treatment of the Eucharist (rather than the synoptic Gospels which focus on the Eucharist at the Last Supper). The Eucharist is the spiritual food that we need, not only to help us during our Lenten penances, but also to help us on our pilgrimage to heaven. When we receive Holy Communion in a state of grace, God strengthens our souls to more easily choose the good and reject the bad. He gives us the Body and Blood of His Son, Jesus Christ, to transform us and make His will our own more and more.
We are all cadets, not striving to be Michigan State Police Troopers, but striving to be the saints that God called us to be in Holy Baptism. To do that, we have to keep our mind on our heavenly goal, and eat the right spiritual food that will strengthen us towards our divinely-appointed end. May our Lenten practices and our worthy reception of Holy Communion keep us in good spiritual shape so that we can appear, without trepidation and with a clear conscience, at the judgement seat of our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.












