The Good Word

The Good Word


Wednesday of the First Week in Lent, Karl Esker, C.Ss.R.

February 21, 2024

Wednesday of the First Week in Lent

February 21, 2024

 

Hello and welcome to the Word, bringing you the Good News of Jesus Christ every day from the Redemptorists of the Baltimore Province. I am Fr. Karl Esker from the Basilica of our Lady of Perpetual Help in Brooklyn, NY. Today is Wednesday of the first week in Lent.


Our reading today is taken from the holy gospel according to Luke.


While still more people gathered in the crowd, Jesus said to them, “This generation is an evil generation; it seeks a sign, but no sign will be given it, except the sign of Jonah. Just as Jonah became a sign to the Ninevites, so will the Son of Man be to this generation. At the judgment the queen of the south will rise with the men of this generation and she will condemn them, because she came from the ends of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and there is something greater than Solomon here. At the judgment the men of Nineveh will arise with this generation and condemn it, because at the preaching of Jonah they repented, and there is something greater than Jonah here.”


The gospel of the Lord.


Homily

Hello and welcome to the Word, bringing you the Good News of Jesus Christ every day from the Redemptorists of the Baltimore Province. I am Fr. Karl Esker from the Basilica of our Lady of Perpetual Help in Brooklyn, NY. Today is Wednesday of the first week in Lent.


Against the background of the leaders and people of Nineve receiving God’s mercy because they had turned from their evil ways and from the violence they had in hand, and turned to God at the preaching of Jonah, we have Jesus’ challenge to the crowds that are gathering around him. They have marveled at his teachings and his miracles, but their hearts have not changed. While some admire and others question Jesus, few are willing to follow and live as Jesus lived. Still, Jesus does not give up on them, but challenges them to seek the wisdom he has to offer, as the queen of Sheba sought the wisdom of Solomon. He asks them to repent and to turn to their God of mercy as the Ninevites did. And those same challenges are made to us.


Those who are preparing to celebrate the Sacraments of Initiation know, probably better than we, that Lent is a time for conversion, for turning our lives more in line with the life of Jesus Christ. As they have prepared for Baptism, they have had to change certain aspects of their life-styles. And they have done so joyfully, because they have learned to confide in the Lord who calls them out of darkness into his wonderful light.


We, who have grown up Catholic, have our customs of forgoing certain things during Lent, but do we really see a change in attitude or disposition that brings us closer to the way Jesus thought and acted? Because, if after Easter our lives just go back into the way we were before, then our Lenten observance will have produced no fruit in our lives. And I wonder how many of us, now, half-way into our first week of Lent, have cheated on the resolutions we made just seven days ago.


Pope Francis suggests that we make our Lent more meaningful by working on our relationship with God and with others. We need to take time to pray and not just say words, but to examine our lives in the light of Christ, and, conscious of our many failings, ask God’s mercy and grace to conform our lives more closely to Jesus by working on just one of them.


We need to take our eyes off of our cellphones, tablets, ant TVs, so we can see those whom God’s has placed near us at home, at work and in our neighborhoods and recognize in them a humanity that is equal to our own. Then we need to fast from anger, complaints and offensive words, so we can offer them patience, meekness and encouraging words. We need to fast from selfishness, bitterness and resentment, so we can offer them compassion, joy and reconciliation.


We can do this, because the closer we get to Jesus, the more we discover that he truly is the greater one, greater than any earthly authority, greater even than our own sinfulness, because he offered his life for us on the cross and rose from the dead. To us, who share in his life, he offers the same victory over death and the promise of eternal life.


May God bless you.