Thursday after Ash Wednesday
I love the bluntness of the reading today from Deuteronomy
(30:15-20):
“See today I set before you life and prosperity, death and disaster.”
When put like that of course there is no choice! Who would
choose death and disaster? But actually that is what we do choose when we do
not follow God’s way. When we go our own way we are in truth opting for the way
of death and disaster. When we go the way Christ has led then we are opting for
life and prosperity. The bluntness of Deuteronomy helps to remind us of this
basic Christian truth.
This same point is reinforced in the psalm at mass today (Ps
1). The man who places his trust in the Lord is like a tree planted beside
flowing waters that yields its fruit in due season. Following the divine path
results in the bearing of fruit – again it is a life-giving path to follow. The
result of making our decisions according to God’s ways, is life.
In the gospel today our Lord reveals the secret of bearing
fruit. It is paradoxical. The more we cling on and grasp onto life, the more we
lose it. When we are anxious and afraid we tend to try to grasp and to cling in
desperation. But clinging on desperately and grasping in fear do not lead to a solution
to our problems. Rather it is trusting in the Lord that will lead us to the
greatest of fruit-bearing trees: His fruit-bearing and salvific cross.
This is the path we are to follow in our keeping of Lent: in
self-denial, in prayer and in almsgiving.
Fr Ian