2006-03-05 God says: “Behold, I make all things new”
March 5, 2006
God says: “Behold, I make all things new” (Rev 21:5). He does not say
that he makes all new things. He does not make the latest clothing
fashion or the newest kind of car: These are human inventions that pass
away. They are, as the Greeks would say, “neo.” Our Lord takes
creatures that already exist and renews them. The Greeks speak of this
new intensity as “kainos.” It is what Jesus means by being “born
again,” which is the renewal of mind and heart. “Therefore we are
buried with him by baptism into death; that like as Christ was raised
up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should
walk in newness of life.” (Romans 6:4).
Two definitive signs of newness are birth and marriage. So
Jesus offers the new birth of baptism, and he calls himself the
Bridegroom who loves his bride, the Church. As baptism is necessary for
salvation, it is available any time, and its greatest celebration is at
the Easter Vigil in the new light of the Resurrection. Normally we do
not celebrate the Sacrament of Marriage during the penitential season
of Lent since these forty days remind us that the Bridegroom once was
“taken away” and those days are a time of fasting (Mark 2:20).
The two official days of fasting are Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Fasting is always part of the heart’s longing for the glory of God.
Abstinence is not a complete fast, but is a discipline refraining from
certain things which are good in themselves. One can express love for
God by abstaining from certain foods, entertainments, or other
pleasures. All Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence, excepting this
year March 17, which is the solemnity of the patron saint of the
Archdiocese of New York. All this fasting and abstaining must be done
in a spirit of joy because the same Lord who loves a cheerful giver
does not welcome gifts begrudgingly given. So, too, almsgiving is a
crucial part of the spiritual life. The complaint, “They are always
asking for money” is a code for “They are always asking for me.” For
the true disciple, this should not be a complaint but an exclamation,
like the shout of Andrew to Simon: “We have found the Messiah!” (John
1:41).
Le Corbusier’s grotesque designs for a modernized Paris with the
venerable old arrondissements demolished, and Speer’s even more odious
planned Nazification of Berlin, were architectural parables of what
happens when man tries to make all things new apart from Christ who is
“ever ancient, ever new.” True renewal consists in adherence to the
eternal life of God. As the noble pagan Antigone said to the willful
governor in classical drama:
“I did not dream thine edict strong enough
That thou, O mortal man, should’st overpass
The unwritten laws of God that know no change.”
Fr. George W. Rutler
