Thursday, March 3, 2022

 Thursday after Ash Wednesday

(Deuteronomy 30:15-20; Luke 9:22-25)

At first glance it seems only ironic that one must die in order to live.  If one wants to have life, she should keep away from things that produce death.  But when we think about it, simulating dying can lead to more life.  Surgeons can cure remove life-threatening cancers after the patient becomes dead-like with anesthesia.

On a higher level, people will experience spiritual renewal when they put an end to wild living.  Dorothy Day lived as a saint when she left behind the bohemian lifestyle of her young adult years. In today’s first reading Moses urges the Israelites to choose life by adopting God’s law.  They will not be following their whims any longer.  Rather, they will discipline themselves with divine precepts which assure bodily and spiritual benefit.  In the gospel Jesus is even more challenging.  To live, he says, one must take up the terror of the cross.  It is a death-dealing instrument that accepted in self-sacrifice brings one to eternal life.

In its beginning Lent seems like such a long haul that we are reluctant to make any sacrifices.  Of course, as all time, Lent proceeds at a rapid pace.  With good effort each day we can see ourselves become stronger, kinder, holier.  At Easter, the journey’s end, we should have a glimpse of the glory of eternal life.