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Second Sunday in Lent LK 9/28-36 |
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| Background: Like Last
Sundays Gospel, this is a story with a strong theological overlay. However, Jesus
surely had an experience of his Father in heaven at some point in his public life in which
he perceived that it was necessary for him to go to Jerusalem and like the prophets die
for the good news he had come to preach. The disciples did not understand this experience
then. Nor is it clear that we understand it now. Jesus saw that, like all humans, he had
to die. He also perceived that is death, like all deaths, would be horrible, though more
horrible than most. Nonetheless because he was confident of His Fathers love for
him, we went to Jerusalem bravely because he knew that ultimately God would vindicate the
good news with his powerful love. So we must understand that God too will vindicate us
eventually and that Jesus will accompany us down into the valley of death. Lent, in a way,
is more about our own deaths and resurrections than it is about Jesuss. |
read the padre |
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| Story: Once there was a
scientist who believed in nothing at all. He enjoyed especially putting down those who had
near death experiences (NDE) in which they were revived after they clinically died. It was
all brain chemistry, he insisted, an evolutionary adjustment for a species that was
conscious of its own mortality. There was no tunnel, no figure in white at the end of it,
no choice about whether to stay or come back. It was all an illusion caused by the brain
chemicals that were released at the moment of death. Then he had a heart attack and was
clinically dead when they got him to the hospital. However, the doctors revived him and he
reported that he had indeed gone through an NDE. It was an illusion, he insisted, caused
by brain chemicals. I still do not believe in anything at all except science. When we are
dead, we are dead and thats that. However, he seemed less afraid of death than most
of his atheist colleagues. One of them asked him if he was not afraid that he might be
wrong. Promise you wont quote me? Yes. Well, I figure that if the NDE was all an
illusion then I have nothing to lose by saying it was an illusion. On the other hand, if
the person in white that the brain chemicals made me imagine is real, well theres so
much love there, I have nothing to lose either because I will be forgiven. So its a
good gamble. Oh, said his colleague. |
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