Today’s first reading, Jeremiah
2: 1-3, 7-8, 12-13, is proclaimed to all
of us in today’s world, as we, too, have “defiled [the Promised Land], “made
[God’s] heritage loathsome,” “rebelled against [God], “went after useless
idols.”
The psalmist speak of God’s
awesome, all prevailing mercy, which “reaches to the heavens.” God’s “faithfulness,”
the psalmist reminds us, “to the clouds.”
God’s “justice is like the mountains
of God; [God’s] judgments, like the mighty deep” (Psalm 36).
If you and I, or any sinner, comes before God, God takes out his gavel and proclaims: “Not
guilty!” “What?” we ask in amazement.
God replies: “Your debt has been
forgiven through my Son, Jesus. Your sin
is no more. It is erased, blotted out, forgiven. His
promise of salvation is real. What God says to us, through Isaiah, is
trustworthy: “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be white as snow;
though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool” (Isaiah 1: 18).
Volumes of testimony
against the human race could be compiled to prove our guilt. Those volumes would reach into the farthest
depths of the earth and reach up into the farthest heights of the heavens. God’s mercy, on the other hand, would be
deeper and higher than any of our transgressions. “…The One sitting on the throne…[says to us], ‘Look,
I am making the whole of creation new. Then He …[says] said to me, ‘It has
already happened. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. I
will give water from the well of life free to anybody who is thirsty; anyone
who proves victorious will inherit these things; and I will be his/[her] God and he[she] will be my son/[daughter]. But the legacy for cowards, for those who
break their word, or worship obscenities, for murderers and the sexually
immoral, and for sorcerers, worshippers of false gods or any other sort of
liars, is the second death in the burning lake of sulphur.” (Revelation 21: 5-8).
Obviously, the choice is
ours. God is not the one who proclaims “Guilty”
nor the one who condemns us.
We do that to ourselves by the choices we make.
As far as God is concerned, He says to us: I “sent…[my] Son into the
world not to judge the world, but so that through him the world might be saved”
(Jn 3:17).
What choices are you and
I going to make today?
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