Sunday, March 1, 2015

God provides ever more – Mark 9:2-9, Gen 22:1-2, 9a, 10-13, 15-18

2nd Sunday of Lent, Yr B; Holy Cross - St. Stan's



There used to be a show on British tv called Crackerjack.  It was a game show, with kids as the contestants.  After every question, the kid would get a prize no matter whether they answered right or wrong.  There were only two catches: firstly, the prizes would marvelous, getting better with each passing question, if they answered correctly; if they answered wrongly, they’d get a pretty boring prize, often a cabbage.  Catch two: they had to hold all of their prizes in their arms.  Drop one, and their time on the show was over.  I don’t think anyone ever got any of the most coveted prizes, because by the time they became available, they were too busy clutching earlier gifts to be able to receive the gifts they really longed for.



There’s a parable here for the spiritual life.  Now, like any image, it falls short.  In the Crackerjack show, the producers were both the ones giving the prizes and insisting that the contestants cling to what they already had.  They were testing the contestants to entertain their audience, and limit their prize money liability.  God has nothing but gifts to give, and there is no limit to His generosity.  He does test us – Abraham’s experience confirms – that but not for His or anyone else’ entertainment.  And it’s not Him who bids us cling.  That’s us.  That’s how we restrict ourselves.  He wants to lead us out of that, to give us untold gifts, and to give the greatest gift: the strength, the virtue, to drop whatever token we cling to and take his outstretched hand; his loving, wounded hand that counts every hair on our heads.

But we cling.  We’ve inherited that, that’s what original sin is, the sin we have from our origin, though it’s not how God made us.  We moved from a posture of trust and harmony in the garden of Eden, to grasping, to clinging.  We lost our faith that God would provide, and we took.  And our hands are stuck in that posture of grasping, of clinging, of clinging, above all, to the illusion that we can fend for ourselves, that we can take God’s place as provider.  And sometimes, we grasp after things that are actually bad for us.  But, more often, it’s subtler than that.  We experience just and even holy delight and thanksgiving at the good things God gives us, the here-and-now signs of His care.  But then our addiction to grasping takes over and we can’t let go.

St. Peter was no less captured by this than anyone else.  In fact, the greatness of the gifts he was given may have increased the temptation.  Here he is, he’s given all to follow Jesus, he’s embraced real hardship, he’s seen his Lord whom he loves face opposition and ridicule, and now he gets to see his brilliance shining forth.  He sees Jesus in his supernatural habitat.  His intuitive realization that this is the Christ, the Messiah of God, is confirmed and then some.  He views heavenly glory, and marvels at how he has been invited to this meeting of heaven and earth.  It’s an amazing experience.  So, he tries to grasp it.  His joy that God has provided this experience fails to nourish faith that God will provide, and becomes an occasion to grasp, to cling, to try to preserve this for all time.  It’s time to build tents, to keep this moment alive.  It’s a natural instinct, the story behind the founding of every other shrine in the Greco-Roman world: a god revealed themselves, and so we built this shrine.  Peter even knows his Jewish heritage well enough to suggest tents as an homage to God’s tent of meeting.

But God always has more to give.  The place of meeting is not to be a tent anymore: but the world.  The veil of the temple was to split in two.  But Peter couldn’t know that yet, it hadn’t happened.  It wouldn’t happen till Jesus had mounted his cross.  Then, Peter would be able to stop grasping.  Or not just then, in fact he’d scatter at that moment, but once he’d seen resurrection.  Then, then he’d know that his vocation was not to build tents on a mountain, but a church on earth.  By stopping trying to grasp this one brilliant encounter with divine glory, he would open his hand to be able to meet it again and again and be sanctified by it.

Our Holy Cross Constitutions, in the chapter on the Cross, tell us of how we find that glory in these words: “Resurrection for us is a daily event. We have stood watch with persons dying in peace; we have witnessed wonderful reconciliations; we have known the forgiveness of those who misuse their neighbor; we have seen heartbreak and defeat lead to a transformed life; we have heard the conscience of an entire church stir; we have marveled at the insurrection of justice.”

What gifts there are for those who don’t grasp, for those who know that to lose even their life, is to gain it.  Abraham knew that.  Abraham knew that God would provide.  God wouldn’t let him sacrifice his son, but Abraham knew that God always surprises us with life, that God’s promise of an heir would be made good on, even without Isaac.  It’s not that Abraham didn’t love Isaac, the text makes very clear how much he did.  It’s that his trust in God’s providing, God’s providence, was even stronger.  We’re certainly not called to love our families any less than we do.  But our trust that God will provide… God calls us to make that even stronger, so nothing is grasped, and hands are open for gift, as He provides ever more.
 



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