Today,
the liturgy offers us an advanced flagrance of true Pascal joy. The
ornaments of the Celebrant are rose. It is “laetare”
Sunday inviting us to a serene joy. «Rejoice with Jerusalem,
and be glad with her, all you that love her...», says the
antiphon of the introit sung today.
God wants us to be
contented. The most elementary psychology tells us that a person who
does not enjoy life ends up sick, both in body and spirit. However,
our joy must be well founded; it must be the expression of serenity
given by a full meaningful life. Otherwise, it would degenerate into
superficiality and silliness. St. Teresa, most accurately,
distinguished between “sainted joy” and “foolish
joy”. The latter is only external; it lasts very little and
leaves a bitter aftertaste.
Our
life of faith is going through difficult times. But they are also
thrilling times. To a certain extent, we may experience the Babylon
exile sung by the psalm. Yes, we can also live an exile experience
«mourning and weeping when we remembered Zion…»
(Ps 137:1). Our outside problems and, most of all, our sins,
may take us by the rivers of Babylon. However, there still is room
for hope and God keeps telling us: «May my tongue stick to my
palate if I do not remember you…» (Ps 137:6).
We
can always rejoice for God loves us so much that He «gave us
his only Son» (Jn 3:16). Soon enough we shall join this
only Son in his walk to death and resurrection. We shall contemplate
the love of He who loves us so much as to die for us, for you and me.
And we shall fill our heart with love and “will look upon him
whom they have pierced” (cf. Jn 19:37), and, inside us,
there will grow such a great joy that nobody will be able to remove
it from us.
The
true joy that enlightens our life does not come from our own effort.
St. Paul reminds us that: thanks may be given by many on our behalf
for the gift granted us (Col 1:11). Let God loves us and let
us love Him, and our joy will be greater next Easter and all our
life, too. And let us not forget to let God come closer to be
regenerated by Him through a good confession before Easter.