The popular Catholic
writer, Scott Hahn, begins his book, A
Father Who Keeps His Promises, with a story from the 1983 earthquake in
Armenia which killed 30,000 people. A father had just dropped his son off at
school when the devastating earthquake hit. He ran through the streets yelling
out his son’s name. When he arrived at the school it had been reduced to a pile
of rubble. He called his son’s name out again and again, “Armand! Armand!” but
he could not find him. Some of the bystanders put their arms around him and
told him that it was no use. There was no hope of finding any of the children alive.
However, the father
remembered the promise he made to his son that if anything should happen to
him, he would be there to save him. So the father went over to the pile of
rubble that had been his son’s school and started to dig. He cleared away bricks,
chunks of asphalt and broken glass. At first, some of the bystanders tried to
help him. But as the hours went on, they abandoned him telling him that it was
no use. But the father, driven by the promise he made to his son, would not let
up. Ten, twenty hours passed and he was still at it clearing away as much
debris as he could and yelling out his son’s name.
He continued his
efforts well into the next day even though the police came by to tell him there
was no hope. Finally, after over thirty hours of digging, he called out his
son’s name and heard a faint voice calling out from under the rubble, “Papa, Papa!” Digging with even more fervor
and calling out his son’s name, he was able to reach the place where he and
several of his classmates were, rescuing
all of them. Everyone was amazed and overjoyed. Young Armand turned to his
classmates and told them, “See. I told you my father would keep his promise.”
This moving story
cannot help but make us think about our Heavenly Father. No matter what, He keeps
His promises. There is nowhere we can go that He cannot find us. There is no
trouble we can get ourselves into that He cannot lift us out of. If an earthly
father can take such care to keep his children safe and rescue them when they
are in danger, what lengths will our Heavenly Father who is love itself not go
to rescue, save and comfort us?
Today’s first reading
from the book of Genesis gives us a beautiful example of one of God’s promises.
After rescuing Noah and his family from the flood, God seals a covenant with
them promising never to devastate the earth again. As a sign of His promise, He
paints a beautiful rainbow across the sky. God makes a promise that He will not
punish His people but save them. He will treat His people tenderly rather than
harshly. He will show compassion rather than judgment.
Throughout the Old
Testament, our Heavenly Father made many other promises as well. The greatest
of these promises is that He would send a Messiah, a Saviour, to free His
people from their sins and deliver them from death. For many centuries the
people of the Old Testament held firm to that promise. They knew that God was
faithful and that He would keep His promise no matter how long it took.
When Jesus appears on
the scene in Galilee preaching the good news, His first words are, “This is the
time of fulfillment.” With Jesus, all of God’s promises are fulfilled. Through
His death, we are delivered from our sins. Through His resurrection, we are
delivered from death. Through the gift of His Spirit, we live with our hearts
set on the things of heaven. And when He comes again in glory to judge the
living and the dead, we will receive the inheritance of eternal life He has
kept for us in heaven from the beginning of time. God is a Father who keeps His
promises. And all of His promises are fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.
As we begin our
Lenten journey, it is important for us to keep our hearts and minds focused on
this great love our Heavenly Father has for us. Though this is a time for us to
mourn our sins and to strengthen our resolve for doing good through penance, we
must never lose sight of why we want to rid ourselves of sin. Sin displeases
God. It offends the One who has shown us so much love. If He did not love us,
our evil-doing would not hurt Him as much as it does. As we meditate on His
fatherly care for us, it makes us even more determined not to hurt or offend
Him again. We may be able to change our behaviour through fear or guilt, but
love is the most powerful motivator. It is love that should be motivating and
driving whatever penances or acts of self-denial we undertake throughout these
forty days.
All the promises God made to the people of Israel
He now extends to us through faith in Jesus Christ, His Son. They are given to
us through our baptism, as Saint Peter reminds us in today’s second reading.
Through that great sacrament, our sins are forgiven and God’s Holy Spirit takes
up His home within us. It gives us the right to be called sons and daughters of
God and to inherit all the promises He makes to those who love Him. We should
call to mind our baptism every day and lay claim to God’s promise that He will
be there to save us whenever we call. He is a Father who keeps His promises. No
matter what happens, we can be sure of that.
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