THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT - A
CHARITY HEALS OUR
INEQUALITY
The Lenten journey becomes more
meaningful as we explore the divinely given helps to holiness. In the first week, we reflected on
fasting that heals our greed. In the second week, we pondered on prayer that
heals our pride. The gospel today enlightens us on the third Lenten discipline
– almsgiving or charity.
Say alms or charity and
immediately we think of coins that drop in the hands of a beggar, or donations
brought to the church or relief items sent to victims of calamities or
accidents. These of course are charitable actions but even people without faith
are moved to do them for humanitarian reasons. Christian charity has a
challenge deeper than mere giving and helping a fellow human being.
In the gospel today (John 4), the
apostles were startled at finding Jesus talking to a woman. And yet Jesus
comfortably converses with this woman he just met at the well. He knows she is
a sinner but offers her hope and new life. He reveals to her what he hides from
others, that he is indeed the Messiah (v. 26). Then he agrees to speak to the neighbors and friends of the
woman.
What was surprising in all these
is that the woman was a Samaritan and Jews and Samaritans don’t mix. The woman
was an adulterer and Jesus was a religious figure. Why did this happen?
The gospel clearly shows us the
charity of Jesus. It is not mere giving of material consolation. Jesus was
there for this woman because in his heart, this woman – a stranger, a sinner –
was her sister in God. He dealt with her kindly not out of pity but because she
too “is part of me.”
That is what charity or
almsgiving really is all about. We give, we help, we share, we extend our hands
because we regard the poor, the victims, the hurting, the needy as a brother
and sister in Christ. there cannot be Christian living without this kind of
charity because a Christian is aware that he belongs to the wider family of
which God is the Father.
In our world today, it is much
easier to see in another person the face of an enemy, one who has hurt me
deeply. It is easy to envisage the
other as a competitor, out to take what I have. It is easy to look suspiciously
at the other, for he/she is unfamiliar. Many times we are simply indifferent
because the other is unrelated to us.
The charity Jesus shows us heals
inequalities and broken relationships. God has shown us great love when he had
mercy on us even though we are sinners, and Christ died for us, as his brothers
and sisters (Rom 5:8-9).
This Lent, are there people you
refuse to look at, talk to, mingle with or even think kindly of? Are there
people the Lord is asking you to consider a brother and sister… again in your
life. This may not be easy. Let us pray for help and guidance from
the Lord Jesus.
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