Lent is a wonderful time to celebrate the reconciling love and the healing
graces our Lord offers us. Like all religious experience, it takes preparation.
Preparing
Reconciliation is what God does. We prepare for it by opening ourselves up, by
reflecting upon the areas of darkness in our lives into which God so deeply
desires to shine a light. It might begin with the simple question: Where might
God be offering me forgiveness and healing?
If my answer is, "I don't know," then I have some reflection to do. I can
examine my life - what I have done and what I have failed to do - and see what
graces are offered me there. If I've come through that "era" of saying that any
guilt, anything that makes me feel bad about myself, is a bad thing, to be
avoided at all costs, then I might have a difficult time coming to genuine
sorrow for my sins. If this is the case, I need to "go to work" on my
reflection, asking God to rouse a sense of embarrassment, leading to deep
sorrow, for any way I may not have been faithful, honest, loving, self-less or
generous - in my relationship with God, with my family, with others. I can look
at each of my responsibilities - as a citizen of a city and a country and the
world, a neighbor, an employee, a member of a parish or congregation, as a
parent or a spouse or as a son or daughter. God will always shine light into
these important parts of our lives, to help us experience remorse and a genuine
desire for forgiveness and healing. The point here is not ultimately to focus on
ourselves. God always reveals us to ourselves, so that God might reveal to us
our need for a Savior. The focus is on God's reconciling, healing love. As John
says, "God showed his love for us when he sent his only Son into the world to
give us life. Real love isn't our love for God, but God's love for us. God sent
his Son to be the sacrifice by which our sins are forgiven."1 John 4:9-10
It may be that I have experienced troubling guilt - coming out of deep childhood
trauma or a long-standing sense of shame This may plague my ability to feel good
about myself at all, and therefore to be able to reflect upon my sins - the ways
I fail at loving. I can still prepare for genuine reconciliation by preparing to
better trust God's love for me, based upon two convictions: First, God's love is
un-conditional. It is not conditioned on my being better, or my overcoming
anything, or even my being good at all. God just loves me. I am always precious
in the eyes of the One who made me and desires to embrace me with the gift of
complete freedom, in everlasting life. Secondly, God knows everything, including
what I'm struggling with or suffering under. And, the God of all compassion,
understands me and loves me. It may be that my greatest sin - the place where I
need the greatest sorrow and desire for forgiveness and healing is my lack of
trust in God's complete and unconditional love for me. We can be certain that
that is a gift God deeply desires to offer me.
It may be that when I ask myself the question about where God might be offering
me forgiveness and healing, I might first come up with a single thing that seems
"big" to me. I might say, "I feel sorry for how I treat my spouse or my
children." I might focus on a long established habit of self-indulgent sexual
fantasy, pornography on the internet or masturbation. I may felt most sorrow for
what I fail to do - all the "good intentions" that never make their way into
action. It is so important not to stop there. None of the "big" things about
which we might immediately feel sorry for sums up all of who we are before God
and others. They may be very important in giving some clues or some leads in
identifying some larger patterns. For example, if a "big" thing that worries me
is that I tend to be "loose" with the truth, at times, I can ask what that
means, what it reveals about me. I may discover that the real pattern of sin has
to do with a deeper dishonesty or lack of integrity: hiding from God; leading a
double life; not being who I really am called to be; trying to manage my life on
my own terms; manipulating others for my own needs and desires. When the Light
of God's love shines into this level of self-awareness, then I am touched by a
powerful experience of reconciliation. Even here, in a place I might be most
embarrassed and feel most naked, God is loving me and offering me wholeness and
joy.
Celebrating Reconciliation
Reconciliation is what God does. Receiving it and celebrating it is what we do.
For those of us who are Catholics, the Sacrament of Reconciliation is a most
natural way to celebrate God's reconciliation. We used to think of this
sacrament as only about "confession" - that it was like a dumping ground for my
sins, where I got forgiven, and I had to "pay a toll." One of the great
recoveries in our Christian history is to re-discover the meaning of this
sacrament.
It is God who forgives sins. And God forgives us the very moment that we come to
the experience that we need forgiveness (which itself comes through God's
grace). At that moment, I feel sorrow and a desire for forgiveness and healing.
In that moment, I am reconciled with God. The reunion, the bond, the connection,
the joy are all there. Three more things remain: to receive it deep within my
heart, to celebrate it, and to participate in the healing process.
When I experience God's forgiveness and love, I am invited to savor it and let
it touch me deeply. Experiencing compassion, patience, understanding, and
forgiveness is itself transforming. If I fail to appreciate what I have just
received - freely and undeserved - then I will take it for granted and risk
moving on without a real healing happening.
Then, I need to celebrate the reconciliation I have received. In the Sacrament
of Reconciliation - individually or in common - I have the wonderful opportunity
to ritualize that celebration. In the Sacrament, my personal journey is joined
with the mystery of God's saving love, as seen in the scriptures, and in God's
desire to save us all. There, in ritual form (even if it is just me and the
priest) I "step forward" and admit that I am a sinner, express my sorrow, and I
name the places in my life where God is shining a Light into what I have done
and what I have failed to do. Then, God's forgiveness is proclaimed "out loud" -
for me to hear and rejoice in: "May God grant you pardon and fill you with God's
peace."
An integral part of the reconciliation involves the healing process. If I sprain
my ankle, the doctor will offer me a number of therapies for healing - ice, for
the first 24 hours to reduce the swelling, wrapping it, elevating it, and then
gradually and carefully using it, until it is healed and strong again. Part of
the Sacrament of Reconciliation is to seek and practice a "remedy" or "medicine"
for the healing I desire. Often that will simply be prayer. Often, expressing my
gratitude to God is one of the most important steps on the road to recovery from
my independence from God. Sometimes, I will need to practice a therapy that is
more carefully planned - making choices about what I can practice doing and what
I can practice avoiding.
May our Lord grant us all the gift of reconciliation, and may we all receive it
and celebrate it well in the holy days ahead.
Source:
Creighton University Online Ministries
See Also:
Preparing for The Sacrament of Reconciliation
Prayer for Lent - Reconciliation
A reconciliation prayer for the great lent
You can find several articles of interest in the Malankara World Section on Baptism
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