Homily of the Day

Thursday after Ash Wednesday

Yesterday we began the season of Lent by having ashes placed on our foreheads as a sign of repentance. The call to turn away from sin and to be faithful to the Gospel still rings out as a reminder of what Lent is all about. Each day we are given the option to choose God’s ways and to do good or to be led astray by the devil. It is not always easy to follow God’s laws. There are many influences around us that can separate us from the love of Christ. Spiritual growth is attained only when we are willing to choose good at all times, not just when we feel like it. There is a saying among athletes when training: “No pain, no gain.” Sacrifice is necessary when we want to attain a particular spiritual goal.

Moses set before the people a choice: the covenant of life with God or certain death without God. God had promised the people that if they obeyed his laws, he would bring them to the land, which he had set aside for them, where they would enjoy life to the fullest. But there was a price to pay. They had to be willing to give themselves completely over to God. The choice was theirs.

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus invites us to take up our cross and follow in his steps to eternal life. Choosing life is not always easy. It means sacrificing certain desires. We make choices every day which represent our values, what is important to us. What does it mean to choose life? It means that we desire life with God both now and in the heavenly kingdom when our time on earth is over.

We all stumble and fall in our desire to follow the Lord. Lent is an opportunity for us to recommit our lives to Jesus. It is a chance to rededicate our lives to the Lord. Jesus always desires that we follow him more closely, and love him more dearly. Let us recommit our lives to Jesus, taking to heart the words that Moses spoke so long ago: “Choose life then … that you may live in the love of the Lord your God, obeying his voice, clinging to him; for in this your life consists.”

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