Fourth Sunday of Lent Year B
The readings for this Sunday help us to reconcile two aspects of God’s nature - He is a God of mercy who wants to save us and He is also a God of Justice who will hold us accountable for our deeds. On the face of it, these two aspects of God may seem to be on diametrically opposite ends of a spectrum. When you show mercy, are you not excusing someone from the dictates of justice, and when you demand justice, are you not withholding mercy?
Scripture reminds us that God is rich in
mercy (Eph 2: 4). Modern man has no issue with this. This is the preferred face
of God. Who would like a harsh and demanding parent, what more a God who metes
out justice without batting an eye? But what is mercy? Just like many other
terms and concepts, the concept of mercy has often suffered distortion under
the hands of those who live under the woke banner of “diversity, equity and
inclusion.” Mercy has become another synonym of these fundamental values of
modern society.
But true mercy is the face of God’s love
turned toward sinners, searching them out, and offering them pardon and
salvation. This is what the Lord declares in the gospel, perhaps one of the
most quoted verses of the bible, “God loved the world so much that he gave his
only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not be lost but may have
eternal life. For God sent his Son into the world not to condemn the world, but
so that through him the world might be saved.” That’s it - the ultimate goal of
mercy is our salvation.
When we reflect on mercy the question
naturally arises about the relationship of mercy to justice. God is not
merciful at the expense of His justice. Mercy does not exclude His justice, nor
is it opposed to it. God’s justice entails that He takes sin seriously. God
does not gloss over sin nor does He pull blinkers over His own eyes pretending
as if sin does not exist. And because God takes sin seriously, He is willing to
pay the greatest price in order to be rid of it - He sent His only Son to save
us by dying for us. Jesus Christ’s finished work is the full and sufficient
cause of our salvation. He has undergone the cross because of our sins,
redeeming us from them, healing us from the deep wound of original sin and its
effects and reconciling us to the Father. So, when we ignore the gravity of sin
in the name of false mercy, we are actually diminishing and trivialising what
our Lord did for us on the cross. When God’s justice is obscured, His mercy is
reduced to something insignificant.
The gospel wishes to highlight that
although the Father has given the Son the authority to judge the world, the Son
has chosen not to do so. Rather, people are judged by their own reaction to the
Son. Throughout the gospel of St John, we encounter individuals who are judged by
their peers and society but as they come to the Lord, they receive no judgment.
Instead, if they are judged, it is because of their response to the light of
truth which our Lord brings. They are either drawn to the light and are
transformed and saved, or they shun the light and condemn themselves to remain
in the darkness. In other words, if hell does exist, and it does, it is not
part of God’s creation or sentence. Hell is the product of man’s free choice-
his choice to reject the light, to reject God and the One whom God had sent
into the world to save us.
It is clear that justice and mercy are not
opposites because both have their origin in God’s holy love. These two, says
Saint John Paul II, “spring completely from love: from the love of the Father
and of the Son, and completely bears fruit in love”. Pope Francis explains that
“[justice and mercy] are not two contradictory realities, but two dimensions of
a single reality that unfolds progressively until it culminates in the fullness
of love” (Misericordiae Vultus §20).
In sum, the cross takes our sins away
because it is the act of God’s gracious judgment on Christ for our benefit. In
layman’s language, Christ takes the fall for us, He takes the punch for us.
“For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might
become the righteousness of God” (2 Cor 5:21). Why would He do that? The answer
is simple: He loves us. “Yes, God loved
the world so much that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in
him may not be lost but may have eternal life.” (Jn 3:16)
Today, we encounter the God of Mercy and
Justice in the sacrament of penance - in confession. Many people are afraid to
confess their sins to a priest for fear of judgment. Others believe that God is
so merciful that He would not demand that we subject ourselves to such
awkwardness and humiliation by exposing our most sordid secrets to a priest.
And yet, we see the truth of what takes place in this sacrament. We are invited
to come before the fountain of love, for both mercy and justice springs forth
from the same source. We must take our sins seriously, as seriously as our Lord
did by dying on the cross to atone for our sins. We must also be confident that
the Lord will embrace us in mercy, if we come before Him with penitent hearts.
For the sacrament of penance is a rehearsal of the Final Judgment. To the
unrepentant sinner, there is reason to be afraid as he will be condemned by his
sins. But to the repentant sinner, he should stand before God’s judgment
without fear, because “there is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out
fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made
perfect in love” (1 Jn 4:17-18).
Scripture does not reveal a God of justice
in opposition to a God of mercy. Instead, Scripture discloses a just and
long-suffering God, who intervenes in history to mercifully restore our dignity
defaced by sin, precisely by leading us towards a renewed righteousness and
justice. At the end, mercy triumphs over judgment. I enjoy teaching servers and
little children that when they clasp their hands in prayer, with the right
thumb (which symbolises mercy) placed over the left thumb (which symbolises
justice) in the shape of a cross, it signifies this eternal truth – at the end
and on the cross, mercy covers over justice.
Amen and thanks for this reading
ReplyDeleteShalom
Michael Cheong
Ex school and uni mate