Homily For The 1st Sunday Of Lent, Year A.
Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7; Psalm
51:3-6.12-14.17; Romans 5:12-19; Matthew 4:1-11.
“THE BEAUTY OF BEGINNINGS”
By: Rev.
Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide.
· Today, the
church celebrates the first Sunday of Lent, Year A. In this season, we journey
with Jesus in the wilderness. This journey in the wilderness is a moment for
reflection, repentance, and renewal.
· On this first Sunday, the reading of the day
wants us to reflect on the beauty of beginnings. New beginnings are often met
with resistance, suspicion, and doubt, but once we dare to make the first move, it becomes our reference point from then on.
· In our
spiritual lives, we also have beginnings. These beginnings may be when we first
received the faith, when we were baptised, when we received our first Holy Communion, when we were confirmed, and when we attended our first Life in the Spirit seminar. This beginning can symbolise when we were closest to God.
· Dearly
beloved in Christ, what point in your life can you call your own beginning?
This life you lived at the beginning, and the one you are living now, which one
glorifies God more? If your earlier beginning was more, God calls us to return
to base. To return to the place of original innocence.
· We often hear
people remember with nostalgia the earlier days of life with God, when we were
closer to God, when we were more sincere, when we dared not commit certain
sins. If you can remember those days, it means that we can retrace our steps
and go back to that era of beginnings. This is what the Lenten season is about.
This is what God is calling us to do today.
· In the
first reading (Genesis
2:7-9, 3:1-7), we read the story of the creation. Notice the initial plan of God. It
was filled with beauty and goodness until sin struck. Notice the power of man
to resist sin began when man started negotiating with sin (the serpent). If you
negotiate with sin, you will always find reasons to commit it!
· Friends, the
man who is the highest beauty of God's creation fell into sin and lost the
beauty intended and the beginning. The damage could have been salvaged if only we
had known to acknowledge our fault and to retrace our steps.
· Many of us
today are still like our first parents. We are never wrong; something or
somebody somewhere is always responsible for our mistakes and misdeeds. We are
always trading blame and never accepting that we are wrong.
· Have you
imagined how God would have been disarmed if our first parents had acknowledged
their sins and confessed? The God who created them still possessed the power to
restore what was damaged. He would have restored them to the beauty of
beginnings.
· St. Paul in
the second reading (Romans
5:12-19), gives us a Ray of hope. Since sin came into the world through one
man, the redemption of man must come from one man. Jesus, the new Adam through
his death on the Cross offers us a second chance. He is always willing to wipe
clean the record of our transgressions and offer us a new beginning. Why not
take this opportunity today?
· The gospel
reading (Matthew
4:1-11) gives an account of the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. This
temptation was hinged on three things: food, power, and fame. These are also
the sources of our different sins and temptations.
· Yes, food
is necessary, power is good, but the ultimate power comes from God. For fame,
we must realise that no fame can last outside God the creator. The bottom line,
dear friends are that once we have set out with God in the wilderness during
this season, temptations will arise from all corners. We must stand strong and
apply the graces that we have received from God in the various sacraments.
· The Lenten
season is a period of 40 days; we may get but never stop, and we may fall by
the wayside, but we must never lose focus; we may even fall into sin, but we
must pick ourselves up. If we miss our way, we must be able to retrace our
steps and go back to the beginning.
· Have we
always been perfect? No! Can we even be perfect? We are humans, we are prone to
mistakes and wrongdoings. God is aware of that, but he still calls us to
righteousness and saintly life. Many times, we may have fallen out of grace, but
the mercy of God is always there to envelop us. That is why we must go to God
pleading for mercy like the Psalmist and say, "Have mercy, O Lord, for we
have sinned" (Ps. 51:3).
· Today, the
Lord has given us another opportunity for a new start and a new beginning. This
news comes with a choice to choose between life and death, between good and
evil. Let us choose good again and enter the peace and love of Christ. So that
our Lenten observances may be pleasing to God.
· May the
good Lord bless his word in our hearts through Christ our Lord, Amen!
· Happy
Sunday!!!
Comments
Post a Comment