Today, we mark the 5th Sunday of Lent, as we get closer to the end of our Lenten journey. In just a week, we will hear the reading of the Passion of our Lord on Palm Sunday, as we enter into Holy Week, one of the most profound religious experiences we Christians have in our entire liturgical year.
Today, our Lenten journey takes us face to face with Lazarus, a beloved friend of Jesus. Lazarus has been sealed away in the tomb for 4 days when Jesus arrives in Bethany. At Jesus’ command, “Come out, Lazarus!”, Lazarus comes out of the tomb, with his hands and feet all tied up with strips of material, with a cloth covering his face. “Unbind him, let him go free!” Jesus commands.
God is present to us in many different ways on our Lenten journey. We search for God’s presence in many different ways on our journey. In one of his books, No Man Is an Island, the Trappist monk Thomas Merton had this to say about seeking God: “In all His acts God orders all things, whether good or evil, for the good of those who know him and seek him and who strive to bring their own freedom under obedience to his divine purpose. All that is done by the will of God in secret is done for his glory and for the good of those whom he has chosen to share in His glory.” So if God orders all things for the good of those who seek him, as we strive to be obedient to him, how do we approach this when we feel that we are bound up like Lazarus in our lives? Sometimes, what binds us up is tied to the circumstances of our lives, while at other times, what binds us up is of our own choosing.
I remember talking to an inmate at a state correction institution as a part of my prison ministry. This young man had been a drug addict for many years; his life revolved around getting his next fix of heroin or Methamphetamine. He told me that his life was dark and ugly all the time. It seemed impossible for him to break free. In the midst of that darkness, he said that he would pass by a Catholic church on his way to work. He said that in the midst of his ugly, ugly life, he would stop in the church to pray, one of the few signs showing him that God was still there in all that was wrong in his life. Although he and the other prisoners definitely did not want to be in prison, did not want to be bound and constrained by the time they served in a correctional institution, many of them admitted that being sent to prison was a wake-up call that saved their lives. I told them that there were worse prisons we can put ourselves into compared to serving times as a prisoner behind the bars.
When I was a missionary I worked with a model called liberation theology. Through the reading of the Exodus story in the Old Testament, the poor whom I worked with in the jungles of South America identified with the people of Israel who were enslaved in Egypt. God led the Israelites out of slavery and liberated them, bringing them to the promised land and to a covenant with Him. God liberated these slaves on many different levels – on a spiritual, economic, political, psychological, social, and religious level, just to name a few. As a missionary, we studied Scripture with the villagers, we listened to their stories and their reality, and we discerned where God was calling them to help themselves. Agricultural projects, a rice milling machine, a distance learning high school, a carpentry workshop and a sewing workshop – these were some of the projects we started with them to give them hope and to help them earn a living and gain confidence in themselves and in their journey of faith, to help them break free from all that was binding them up and enslaving them in their lives.
We are bound up in a lot of different ways. Sometimes we can physically break through those boundaries, and in other ways, we can break free on other levels. As a missionary, I had to overcome a lot of adversity and struggle, not the least was sickness and violence. Yet, through my missionary work and through all I had to endure, on many levels, God liberated me as well. How are we bound up – and how is God leading us in the situation we are in? How do we search for God and find him in those things that tie us down?
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