WONDERING GURU
Fifth
Sunday of Lent, 17th March 2024
Jeremiah
31: 31-34; Psalms 51: 3-4, 12-15; Hebrews 5: 7-9; John 12: 20-33
Fr. Nelson Lobo OFM Cap
The Difference between the
Old & the New Covenant: - The words "New
Covenant" indicates that Jeremiah is comparing two different covenants
through which God established a relationship with his people. If God is going
to make a new covenant, that means there was an old one. The first reading
tells us that if the people, observed his laws and observed his commands, he
would bless them. But if they failed to live as his law instructed, they would
suffer. Yet before the ink was dry on the old covenant, they had already broken
it by engaging in all sorts of pagan immorality. They had forgotten what God
had done for them. Now let us fast-forward several hundred years to the sixth
century B.C., When Jeremiah served the little nation of Judah, the remaining
fragment of God's Covenant. Now Jeremiah's book is filled with doom and gloom
and warnings to the tribe of Judah, because the people had forsaken God. They
had forsaken him time and time again. Finally, God gave them a seventy-year
"time out". He allowed an
enemy nation to attack, defeat, and deport them from their homeland for seven
decades. That was the historical backdrop about today’s first reading.
We the people have
continued in that sinful tradition. In reality, this game show has been played
over and over in God's word, beginning in the Garden of Eden. God had given
Adam the sweetest deal. Free run of the Garden, a beautiful wife, peace, no
war, no famine, no poverty, no hate, and an intimate personal relationship with
the creator of the universe. Then Satan came along (Genesis 3) tempting Eve
with a new deal. One that he portrays as a better Deal. Satan basically says to
Eve that if she takes his deal she will be like God. There is an old saying "Opportunity
knocks once but temptation beats on the door every day." We are constantly being tempted to take a bad
deal.
What does God's "New deal" or the New
covenant offers us?
"'This is the covenant I will make with
the house of Israel after that time,' declares the Lord. 'I will put my law in
their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be
my people, 'For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no
more.'" This New Covenant was no
longer only to the Old Testament people but also for the New Testament people as
well. The new covenant relationship with God is not based on what people do. It
is based on God, on Jesus Christ. The
promised Messiah brought this new covenant relationship to fruition by his
sacrifice: "I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins
no more." (Jer 31:34; Heb 8:12). Iniquity against God pardoned for the
sake of his Son. He will separate our Sins as far as the East is from the West
and He will cast them into the depths of the sea (Psalm 103:12; Micah 7:19). This
is the New Covenant, a covenant of Grace. A New Covenant based on faith, not
obedience to a law. Through this New Covenant we are set free from the bondage
of sin no longer slaves but children of God.
Daring Discipleship: We
live in a world where heavenly things confuse our earthly minds. Jesus tells us
that our very usefulness or our fruitfulness for God is tied to our willingness
to surrender our lives even to die for Him. There are about six instances where
Jesus mentions bearing fruit as a Christian - and five of those are tied to the
cross or dying. In Short - it is in dying and not in doing that we bear fruit
for God. Some examples of biblical contradictions that human mind finds hard to
understand.
We see unseen things (2
Cor. 4:18); We conquer by yielding (Rom. 6:16-18); We find rest under a yoke
(Mt. 11:28-30); We reign by serving (Mark 10:42-44); We are made great by
becoming little (Luke 9:48); We are exalted by being humble (Mt. 23:12); We
become wise by being fools for Christ’s sake (1 Cor. 1:20, 21); We are made
free by becoming His bond servants (Rom. 6:10); We wax strong by being weak (2
Cor. 12:10); We triumph by defeat (2 Cor. 12:7-9); We find victory by glorying
in our infirmities (2 Cor. 12:5); We live by dying (John 12:24, 25; 2 Cor.
4:10,11)
Conclusion: Jesus
is looking for people who will follow Him with a reckless abandon. He wants
people who will throw caution to the wind and embark on the journey called
discipleship. Jesus is searching for a few daring hearts who will fully devote
themselves to Him. Jesus is searching for people who will give their lives for
Him. Jesus is looking for people just like you and me. The only question that
remains is this: will you join the journey? Will you take up the call Jesus
issues: Come, follow me? Will you dare to be a disciple? Discipleship is not for sissies.
“When
Christ calls someone; He bids them to come and die”.
(Dietrich
Bonhoeffer- German theologian)
No comments:
Post a Comment