3d Sunday of Lent
Feb
26, 1989
1 Cor
10: 1-6, 10-12Ex 3: 1-8, 13-15
St. Theresa, Bronx, N.Y.
“Our fathers were all under the cloud
and all passed thru the sea; . . . all were baptized into Moses. All ate the same spiritual food” (1 Cor 10:
1-3).
In the 1st reading we heard God speak
from the burning bush and commission Moses to return to Egypt and rescue the
Hebrews from the slavery. Maybe you
remember the scene from the Ten
Commandments.
Moses leading the Hebrews to cross the Red Sea (Nicolas Poussin) |
As you know, God used Moses to liberate
his people. Under Moses, the Hebrew
people were formed into God’s very own people.
God led them thru the Red Sea and the Sinai desert, miraculously fed
them, and gave them the Law. God defeated
their enemies and brought them to the promised land, “a good and spacious land,
a land flowing with milk and honey” (Ex 3:8).
All of this history is recounted in the
books of Exodus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
All of this history Paul evokes when he reminds the Christians of
Corinth about Moses and the people who followed Moses out of Egypt toward the Promised
Land. Paul reminds the Corinthians that,
despite all God’s care and his miracles, despite the leadership and example of
Moses, “God was not pleased with most of them, for ‘they were struck down in
the desert’” (10:5).
Why were they struck down? After being saved from Egyptian slavery,
after being baptized—figuratively—in the Red Sea, after being fed with manna
and water from the rock, and after accepting the covenant of the Law, they
rebelled. They rebelled repeatedly, worshipping
the golden calf, grumbling and complaining constantly, and finally not trusting
God to lead them in battle against the inhabitants of the land. They were saved, and then they relapsed.
So, Paul says, watch out, my dear
Corinthians. “These things that happened
to them serve as an example” (10:6).
The Corinthian Christians lived in a
major city, the Manhattan of the times:
port, markets, sports, theater, politics, religious temples, and vice of
every sort. By accepting Christ, a
Corinthian stepped away morally from that world of corruption, consumerism, and
pleasure. He followed Christ, the New
Moses; ate a new spiritual food, the Eucharist; and looked for a new promised
land of milk and honey, eternal life in Christ.
But the Corinthian Christian was
physically still in the desert with all its dangers. It was easy for him or her to meet old pagan
acquaintances, go to old haunts, take part in former pastimes. If he got smug about salvation, he would be
in serious trouble. “Let anyone who thinks
he is standing upright watch out lest he fall” (10:12).
When we look around us we certainly see
plenty that could make us feel upright.
Let me make a distinction here between the moral and the political
orders. I don’t know how many times I’ve
heard someone say of politicians, “They’re all a bunch of crooks.” Whether that refers to NYC or to Washington,
such skepticism is healthy and prudent.
It’s the same skepticism that our Founding Fathers had; it’s why they
set up a system of checks and balances and wanted frequent elections, limited
federal government, and a free press. If
such political skepticism makes us keep mayors and school boards, judges and
congressmen and even presidents on a tight leash, then we’re wise and are
following the best American political tradition.
But in the moral order it’s too easy
for us to look around and condemn: those
crooked politicians, those drug dealers, those homosexuals, those adulterers,
those child beaters, those TV evangelists, those lazy bums, those thugs. And so on.
St. Philip Neri used to see plenty of
crime and misery in the streets of Rome.
He always condemned sin, but of the people he said, “There, but for the
grace of God, go I.” In today’s gospel,
Jesus says much the same thing: The
misfortune of others isn’t an occasion for us to feel good about
ourselves. It’s a reminder of our common
mortality and our common sinfulness.
“Unless you repent you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:3,5).
Having repented once, or twice, or
three times before; having given our lives to Christ in the past—all that’s no
guarantee for the future. Not one of us
can be sure of tomorrow, much less of final perseverance in God’s grace. If we dare not trust the rascals in city
hall, we dare not trust the rascal within us either. And the stakes are infinitely greater.
“Let anyone who thinks he’s standing
upright watch out lest he fall.” Let us
take a look at our spiritual ancestors who followed Moses out of Egypt, and
profit from their example. We must
repent daily, never grow smug, and always keep turning to Jesus our Savior.
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