3rd Sunday of
Lent (Scrutiny)
This is a love story.
This is the story of all of us, but in particular, it
is the story of our elect with us today who have been searching, praying, and
drawing closer to Jesus these past several months. And that is why we have read
these readings today, because we have our elect present. At all the other
Masses today we will hear different readings, but the Church says we must read
these readings today, for them to hear, because they are nearing the completion
of this stage of their faith journey, to enter fully into the life and love of
Jesus in his Church through baptism, confirmation and first eucharist at the
Easter Vigil.
Many people think that the RCIA program is all about
knowledge, all about learning about the Catholic Church, and partly it is. But
mostly, it is about falling in love. There are lots of people who have
knowledge of the Church and its teachings, but not a lot of us are actually in
love with it. There are lots of people who have a rudimentary knowledge of
Jesus, but not a lot of us are actually in love with Him. Because knowledge is
not enough.
Unless we move beyond just knowledge
to love, our faith will never be fulfilled. It is through reason that we
understand with the head. It is through prayer and contemplation and worship
that we understand with the heart. If all you have is book learning then your
faith has no motivation. If all you have is emotion, your faith has no roots.
It is like the person Jesus said builds his house on sand. When trials and
tribulations blow there is no conviction there to keep it from being torn down.
Just like there are stages of grief,
there are stages of love. And the woman at the well goes through all of them.
This seems almost like a sparring match, sort of like an old romantic movie.
There’s a chemistry between Jesus and the woman, a reaching out, a pushing
back, and gradually the woman comes closer to Jesus who is calling her to
conversion.
First there is a connection.
Sometimes it’s a strong attraction and sometimes it’s tentative. This is
followed by a mutual give and take where both people reveal things about
themselves over time. This either leads to a stronger attraction and more
revelation that leads to knowledge of the other, and a growing sense of trust.
Only after trust is established can love truly happen.
The woman at the well came to love
Jesus only after he “told me everything I have ever done”. But that was not
what turned her heart. Everyone in her village knew her past. It was the fact
that even though he had such intimate knowledge of her and her life, he did not
judge her for it like her neighbors did. Instead, he offered her eternal life.
How liberating that must have felt for someone who felt so ostracized and
worthless that she had to go to the well in the middle of the hot day, when no
other people were expected to be there! Jesus gave her back her dignity. He
spoke to her when he wasn’t supposed to. He conversed with her as an equal,
without looking down on her. And he offered her himself, the life-giving water
that would change her life forever.
And like anyone who has fallen in
love, she ran and told everyone about it. She told her neighbors who had
totally ostracized her that she had found the messiah, and she was compelled to
bring them to him. How much courage that must have taken! But people in love do
great acts of courage without thought sometimes, without considering the
consequences.
We are all the woman at the well. We
all have a past that includes things we aren’t particularly proud of. We all
have sinned and have felt the worthlessness sin can bring. And we have all
encountered Jesus in some way or other. Some of us have moved our relationship
with him to another level, to the level of trust. Some of us have gone all the
way to love. We have fallen in love with Jesus.
This
morning we are celebrating the first scrutiny for our elect. There will be two
more in the weeks to come. They’re not here to bare their souls to anyone, and
we’re not here to scrutinize them. They have been scrutinizing themselves for a
long time, and today we’re here to accept them as they are, just as Jesus
accepts them for who they are. Just as he accepted the woman at the well.
We
will share with them the statement of our beliefs. We will profess once again
the truths that have been revealed to us by God himself, the truths that make
us Christian, the truths that bind us together, the truths that lead us to love
of God and of one another, the truths that lead us to eternal life.
The woman at the well was faithful to her understanding of
her beliefs, but that alone would not ensure her salvation. It was not until
she had a conversation with her God, one to one, face to face, did she begin to
understand. And that conversation was brutal and honest. It brought into the
light what had been going on in the darkness. We are all called by Jesus to
that conversation. Our elect even more so. But that conversation should not be
something to fear; it is necessary to remove the barriers we have set up to
loving God. Just as we must move from knowledge to trust to love of God, we
need to confront our own selves with all our imperfections, if we can allow
ourselves to trust, if we can allow ourselves to be loved.
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