April 2, 2006
Fifth
Sunday in Lent (B)
Reverend Jeffrey M. Kemper
Jer 31:31-34
X
Heb
5:7-9 X
John 12:20-33
The image of the seed
falling to the ground and dying
in order to bear much fruit
is not an image unique to
Christianity.
In fact, anyone could come
up with the image
if they know enough about
gardening.
The seed actually ceases to
exist
in order to become something
better,
a plant which will produce
many more seeds.
Why would Jesus choose to
use such a common and ordinary symbol
instead of an exotic,
extraordinary one?
The answer lies in a most
basic truth of Christianity and Catholicism:
God speaks to us, deals with
us,
in ways we can understand
and in which we can participate.
We can understand the
example of the seed;
we can relate it to Jesus
who is buried in the ground
and rises to something much
better:
an eternal life, not just
for himself,
but for us, for all
humanity, for all time.
Jesus doesnt just mean the
example for himself,
but for all of us.
We all have parts of us that
die so that new life can come about:
we die to the security of
the womb
to be born into the world;
we die to the stages of
earlier childhood
to grow into teenagers,
and die to the qualities of
teenage life to become adults.
This is a natural part of
being human, of being alive.
Yet, what humanity values
most,
and what Jesus calls us to,
is not just dying to
ourselves for our own growth,
but even more so, to die to
ourselves
for the sake of others.
What is it that made the
firefighters and police
who died in the World Trade
Center Tragedy heroes?
Not just that they died,
but that they were willing
to lay down their lives
to save others.
What is it that makes the
soldier killed or wounded in action a hero?
Not just that they were
willing to go to a strange land and carry a gun,
but rather that they did
this for others, for their country.
What is it that makes
marriage such a big celebration?
Not just that two people
seek happiness for themselves,
but that they pledge to live
for the other person,
to let things die in
themselves that would make themselves happy
for the sake of the other
person.
Ultimately, what has the
greatest value is not just dying to oneself,
but dying to oneself for the
sake of others.
To do what Jesus did
and calls us to do.
What needs to die in us
so that Gods life may grow
in us, twenty, thirty, or a hundred fold?
Do we need to let our own
talking die
so that we can listen to
others?
Do we need to let our
judgments of people
especially those in our
families or work places
so that Gods image of them
may be seen?
Do we need to let our time
in front of the TV or the CD player die
so that we may hear God
speaking to us in the Scriptures or in silent prayer?
We are on the downside of
Lent.
Maybe our Lenten penances
have begun to fall apart.
Now is the time to recommit
ourselves
to making them bear fruit,
to pick up the pieces and
continue on.
Maybe it is time to ask
ourselves
how we can die to ourselves
so that others may live more
fully.
In that way,
on Easter,
the Lord may find us to be
people
who do not just sing his
praises,
but who live imitating the
Lord who has saved us,
by being a seed that fell to
the ground and died
so that others you and I
may have life.
© 2006 Jeffrey M. Kemper