Today is Laetare Sunday and it has a similar role to Gaudete Sunday in Advent. Both Lent and Advent are considered penitential seasons because they are preparing us for the greatest feasts of the liturgical year: the Incarnation and the Resurrection. During our preparation for these great feasts, it is possible to get bogged down – especially during Lent. Perhaps we’ve already neglected to do some of the penance we intended to, or that was required by the Church. Perhaps we’re ready for Lent to be over already – it seems to coincide with feeling ready for the pandemic to be over with. Both Gaudete and Laetare Sunday are an invitation to joy about three-quarters of the way through the season, but they don’t point to the same kind of joy. Gaudete is an invitation to a more interior kind of joy. Advent is a season of hope and of preparation, and we can get a little lost in the hustle and bustle of the activities so Gaudete calls us to pause and consider the “reason for the season” so to speak. An interior joy at the coming of so great a savior.
Saturday of the Second Week of Lent
I think we’re all familiar with the Parable of the Prodigal Son. It is such a powerful story and especially important during the lenten season. Even though we call this the Parable of the Prodigal Son, it is important to remember that the scriptures do not actually use a title. This is a story about a son who took his inheritance and squandered it, but it also the story about a son who followed all the rules and did what he was supposed to do but was filled with bitterness. This is also a story about a father who has an invincible love for his two sons.
Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Leprosy is used in the scriptures to help us understand the reality of sin. As obvious as leprosy is on the outside – causing the skin to have sores and take on the pallor of death – so real is the hidden sin within our soul. When we sin, even though we can’t see it or feel it, our soul develops wounds and becomes as though it were dead. What does it mean for our soul to have wounds? We understand physical wounds because they are usually discolored and cause pain. What is a soul-wound? What does it mean to be wounded in one’s soul?