Homily for Palm
Sunday
March 25, 2018
My Sins Did This
In the
Old Testament, sins were forgiven through sacrifice. That sounds rather basic,
but consider what a sacrifice means. It means that the sinner must go to his
flock or herd and pick out, not just any sheep, but the finest, most healthy,
most unblemished male – a valuable commodity.
He then
takes the sheep on a journey of many miles to Jerusalem – an arduous, difficult
journey. He is forced to drag it against its will into the Temple, where he
kills it. The sinner is forced to hold it down on the altar as it struggles to
be free, all the while thinking: my sins
caused this. He drives the knife into its throat, as it shrieks and writhes
in pain, thinking: my sins caused this.
He watches the struggle slowly stop, as blood flows out from the animal and
washes onto the floor, all the while thinking: my sins caused this. He then must cut the animal open, feeling the
still-warm heart and innards, knowing that he killed this innocent animal
because his sins caused this. He
offers and burns this animal’s organs on a fire, knowing that this destruction
was because his sins caused this.
I
apologize for being graphic, but we need to understand just how much sins cost
– when you feel the blood running over your hands, when you hear the shrieks of
pain of the animal, when you see it stop breathing and touch its still-warm
organs, you know, viscerally, the cost of sin.
But we
do not live under the Old Covenant. Our New Covenant was sworn with a much more
precious price. Now, when we see the crown of thorns, we should think, my sins caused this. When we consider
the scourge marks across His back, we should think, my sins caused this. When we look at the nails that penetrated
through flesh and bone, we realize, my
sins caused this. When we see the Holy Face contorted in agony, when we see
the Precious Blood race to the ground, when we see the Man upon the Cross
wheeze His last breath, we are forced to think: my sins caused this.
And when
we look upon the Cross, we realize that here, our judgment has been passed, our
sentence has been paid, and all that is left for us is love and mercy.
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