Sunday, June 06, 2021

Progress through Acceptance (of Acceptance)


Solemnity of The Most Holy Body & Blood of Christ

Readings: Exodus 24:3-8; Psalm 115(116):12-13,15-18; Hebrews 9:11-15; Mark 14:12-16,22-26

Picture: cc Ștefan Jurcă


My dear friends, what crosses your mind when you hear these words: dating, going steady, engagement, and marriage? Well, they all refer to a kind of relationship or bond, right? The romantic kind. But that’s not all. Arranged in the right order, these words also describe a certain progression. When a couple moves through the stages from dating all the way to marriage, their relationship is deepened and strengthened, right up to the point where they publicly declare a life-long commitment to each other. Each one promising to love and honour the other all the days of my life. 


We find a similar progression in our readings for Corpus Christi. As you may have noticed, both the first reading and the gospel describe a kind of ritual. The significance of which becomes clearer to us when we pay attention to three words: covenant, blood, and law (or command).


The word covenant tells us that both rituals have to do with a relationship. In this case, the bond between God and God’s people. And just as a marriage is sealed by an exchange of rings, so is the covenant between God and the people sealed in blood. Also like marriage, the terms of this relationship are clear. God promises to love and protect the people, who promise, in turn, to observe God’s law (God’s commands).


But that’s not all. Between the first reading and the gospel, there is also a kind of progression, which the second reading helps us to appreciate. The first covenant is sealed with the blood of mere animals, sprinkled on the people by Moses. The new covenant is sealed in no less than the blood of Christ, the Son of God, poured out for all to drink. The law received by Moses is written externally on tablets of stone. The law given by Jesus is written interiorly on hearts of flesh.


Like the journey from dating to marriage, between the first reading and the gospel there is a deepening and strengthening of relationship. Culminating in a final declaration of lasting and irrevocable commitment. But there is one crucial difference. In most marriages, people choose partners whom they have reason to believe will remain faithful. Yet God’s commitment to us is given despite our repeated infidelities and betrayals. Christ’s life is offered for us – his body broken, his blood poured out – even in the face of indifference and neglect, of rejection and ridicule. In his Dying and Rising, the Lord tirelessly reaches out a hand of friendship to us, patiently waiting for us to reciprocate. As we are doing now, by gathering to attentively recall his memory, and then dispersing to bear witness to his love.


Isn’t this at once the great consolation and heartbreak of our faith? That all it takes to progress in our relationship with God, is for us to accept God’s radical acceptance of us? And isn’t this something worth considering especially now, when many are yearning for yet can’t seem to find God? Sisters and brothers, especially in these Covid times, what will you do to keep making progress in your relationship with God today?

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