YEAR C: HOMILY FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY OF LENT (5)

YEAR C: HOMILY FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY OF LENTHOMILY THEME: SECOND CHANCEBY: Very Rev. Fr. John LouisHOMILY: READINGS: Joshua 5:9-12 / 2 Corinthians 5:17-21/ Luke 1-

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YEAR C: HOMILY FOR THE 4TH SUNDAY OF LENT

HOMILY THEME: SECOND CHANCE

BY: Very Rev. Fr. John Louis

 

HOMILY: READINGS: Joshua 5:9-12 / 2 Corinthians 5:17-21/ Luke 1-3, 11-32

There are times we wish we could be given a SECOND CHANCE. A worker misconducts himself and he is given the sack; he then pleads for a second chance. A bad decision leads to a big loss in business; and one looks for a second chance to do things right for the business to grow. A husband/wife offends the spouse and pleads for forgiveness. A child disobeys his/her parents and he/she pleads for the chance to do better.

The last example is similar to the parable of the prodigal son (cf. today’s gospel reading). The prodigal son gravely offended his father by asking for his share of the property while the father was still alive. His request amounted to saying to his father: “you are living too long, you better die so I can inherit my share of your property”. He was given his share of the property alright but he was soon to squander it. Consequently, he landed himself in the most miserable state of wanting to eat food meant for pigs – animals which the Jews considered unclean. Regretting his offence against his father, the prodigal son decided to go and ask for a second chance: “Father, I have sinned against God and against you; I no longer deserve to be called your son. Treat me like one of your servants” (Luke 15:18-19).

Fortunately for the prodigal son, since he left home, the father had been looking forward to the opportunity to give him a second chance. Thus while he was a long way off home, the father caught sight of him and the “old” man rather ran towards his son to welcome him home as if he had never offended him. Indeed, he was welcomed home like a hero, with the finest clothes, a ring of legitimate inheritor, new shoes and feasting. This is simply incredible! However, Jesus says that this is only a “picture” of how God gives us a second chance when we are truly contrite for our sins and confess them. For indeed, from the moment we sin, God eagerly looks for the opportunity to unconditionally forgive and restore us to our status as His sons and daughters!

You may, however, be saying that your sin is too great to be forgiven. Beloved, I wish to remind you that there is no sin greater than God’s mercy and forgiveness (cf. Psalm 103):

  • Is our sin idolatry? Remember, the prodigal son sought to control his own life and destiny; to have nothing to do with his father; that was a kind of idolatry and yet he was given a second chance. So, if we have also ignored the Living God and sought to control our lives and destinies by following other “gods”, the Living God says, “I want to give you a second chance; I want to forgive you; so return to me!”
  • Is it fornication or adultery? Remember, the prodigal son spent his life with prostitutes yet he was forgiven; so ours can also be forgiven. God is saying, “return to me, for a second chance!”

Beloved, whatever be our sin, God is asking us to return to Him to enjoy the grace of a second chance. But probably you are saying, I have had my second chance already and I have squandered it. Beloved there is still good news: for God gives us not only one second chance but many second chances for as long as we live. If God wants us to forgive others 70 x 7 times, then he gives us 70 x 7,000 “second chances”. This simply means that He forgives us every time we repent and ask for a “second chance”.

And why is God so eager to forgive us, and as often as we plead for his mercy? It is because, as St. Paul explains, by dying on the cross the Son of God has made amends for us already: “For our sake God made Him [Jesus Christ] who did not know sin to be sin , so that in Him we might become the very holiness of God” (2 Cor. 5:21).

In other words, when we sin, God (like the father of the prodigal son who overlooked the offence done to him) sees not our sin, but the sacrificial blood of Christ, by which we are given the new clothes and shoes of holiness, as well as the rings of the inheritors of heaven. Beloved, as St. Paul says, “all this has been done by God, who has reconciled us to Himself through Christ. … I mean that God, in Christ, was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting the transgressions of men [and women] against them” (2 Cor. 5:18-19).

Beloved, let us request for our second chance right now (pray with me): Lord Jesus, I am in need of a second chance right now! You gave the thief on the cross who repented a second chance and the joy of Paradise! I, therefore, humbly beseech You to overlook my many sins and give me today the joyful relief of a second chance! Amen!

By Very Rev. Fr. John Louis

 

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