1st Sunday of Lent
Feb. 18, 2018
Gen 9: 8-15
1 Pet 3: 18-22
Our Lady of Lourdes, Bethesda, Md.
“See,
I am now establishing my covenant with you and your descendants after you…”
(Gen 9: 8).
The
word covenant is used 5 times in the
8 verses of our 1st reading. It’s the
1st covenant mentioned in the Bible between God and his elect, his chosen
ones—in this case, Noah and his descendants, i.e., the entire human race.
According
to the story, God has been so angered by the sinful behavior of his human
creatures that he’s wiped them out, and all living creatures as well—because
there’s a fundamental unity in creation, and homo sapiens can’t be neatly separated
from the animal or plant kingdoms. God
has excepted only 1 upright man, Noah, and his immediate family and a pair of
each species of animal (Gen 6:19)—or, in a 2d version of the story, 7 pairs of
clean animals and 1 pair of the unclean (7:2).
(The account of the great flood that we have in our Bible today is an
editorial melding of 2 earlier sources, and the melding isn’t always smooth.)
Landscape with Noah's Thank Offering
(Joseph Anton Koch)
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Having
survived thru a gracious act of God, Noah and his family respond by offering a
sacrifice. God is pleased, and he
responds with this covenant promise, that never again will he react so angrily
as to destroy the earth with water as he has just done (8:20-22). And he provides a sign of his pledge, a peace
sign, as it were, of this covenant that he freely initiates: he places his bow in the heavens. The Hebrew word used here for the rainbow is
the same word that means a bow that’s a weapon of war. So God hangs up his weapon, puts it to rest. That word usage makes God’s covenant sign all
the more powerful now as a symbol of his patience with us and his willingness
to bear with our evil—our evil hearts, our evil desires, our evil words, our
evil deeds: “the desires of man’s heart
are evil from the start,” the Lord declares even as he smells the sweetness of
the holocaust that Noah offers (8:21).
The
Lord knows who we are and how we are—so few of us righteous like Noah. And he begins to devise what we might call
Plan B. He’ll call Abraham and make
another, more specific covenant with him, then Moses and yet another, very
specific covenant, all leading eventually to the last, eternal covenant
effected thru the sacrifice of Jesus.
That’s the covenant that St. Peter alludes
to, without using the word.
“Beloved: Christ suffered for
sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might lead you to God”
(3:18). And we enter this covenant
relationship by the power of God’s Spirit.
As Jesus Christ “was brought to life in the Spirit” (3:18), so are
we. And, in view of the Noah story,
isn’t it really ironic that the sign of Jesus’ covenant is water! The water of the great flood, Peter says,
“prefigured Baptism, which saves you now,” washing us clean not of physical
dirt but of the moral or spiritual filth of our sins, cleansing our consciences
and uniting us to our Lord Jesus (3:21).
In
this season of Lent, we’re invited to renew our covenant relationship with God
the Father by reconnecting with Jesus:
by repentance of our sins (“Repent, and believe in the Gospel,” Jesus
proclaims [Mark 1:15]); by celebrating the sacrament of Reconciliation, which concretizes
our repentance and brings the Spirit into our hearts and our lives afresh and
renews the grace of Baptism; by recommitting our lives to the truth that Jesus
teaches and the way of living that he demonstrates.
We
prayed a little earlier that our Lenten observances will help us conduct
ourselves in Jesus’ way, in a way that “pursues … the riches hidden in Christ”
(Collect)—the riches of our Father’s love, the riches of virtue, the riches of
the seeds of eternal life.
May
the Holy Spirit of Jesus draw you and me ever closer to Jesus himself, and thru
him to the Father who created us, loves us, and wants us to spend eternity with
him.
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