Lataere Sunday
March 30, 2014
Ephesians 5.8-14; John 9.1-14
+ Things sure are looking rosy around here
this morning, aren’t they? No pun intended, of course. I really love it
when we do the Rose Sundays. Especially in Lent.
Today is, of course, Lataere Sunday. Lataere, of course, means "Rejoice" in Latin. We
are now at the midpoint of Lent. And
because we are, it is a time to rejoice. Essentially, we get a little break
from Lent on this Sunday.
You’ll
notice flowers, which are normally
forbidden during Lent, are on the altar here this morning. Traditionally, the organ
was never played during Lent, except on Laetare Sunday. Luckily, we always have
the organ.
Traditionally, even weddings, which
were normally banned during Lent, could be performed on this day. I’m
happy we’re not doing that today.
The only other time of the year we
celebrate with our rose vestments is in Advent, on Gaudete Sunday. On that Sunday, we
also get a little break.
As
most of you know, I was out at Assumption Abbey in Richardton, ND for our
minister’s conference. During
our Friday night social time, the Bishop again singled St. Stephen’s out as the
only congregation in the Diocese of North Dakota that pulls out the rose
vestments for Lataere and Gaudete Sundays. Actually, he said our vestments
looked more Pepto-Bismal. Hey, I’ll take
a compliment from the Bishop any day, even if it I tongue-in-cheek.
The Gospel reading for
this Sunday in the old lectionaries was John 6:1-15, the multiplication of the
loaves and the fishes -- symbols of the Eucharist to come on Maundy Thursday of
Holy Week. But, I’m happy we have the
Gospel reading we have for today.
This story of Jesus
healing the blind man speaks loud and clear to us. In a sense today—Lataere Sunday, the half-way mark of Lent—is a time for
us to examine this whole sense of blindness. Not just physical blindness, but
spiritual blindness, as well. My theme for Lent this
year, as you have all heard me say by now, has been brokenness, or more
specifically, our brokenness in relation to the broken Body of Jesus in the
Eucharist.
In a sense, our brokenness and our
blindness are similar. In our brokenness we become like blind people—or, at
least, like nearsighted people. We grope
about. We find ourselves dependent upon
those things that we think give us come sense of clarity.
But ultimately, nothing really seems to
heal our nearsightedness. In fact our
sight seems to get worse and worse as we age.
In our Gospel reading for today, we
find a man blind from birth. The miracle
Jesus performs for him is truly a BIG miracle. Can you imagine what it must’ve
been like for this man? Here he is, born without sight, suddenly seeing. It must have been quite a shock. It would, no
doubt, involve a complete reeducation of one’s whole self. By the time he reached the age he was—he was
maybe in his twenties or thirties—he no doubt had an idea in his mind of what
things may have looked like.
And, with the return of his vision, he
was, I’m certain, amazed at what things actually looked like. Even things we might take for granted, such as
the faces of our mother and father or spouse, would have been new for this man. So, the miracle Jesus performs is truly a
far-ranging miracle.
There’s also an interesting analytical
post-script to our Gospel reading. St
Basil the Great and other early Church Fathers believe that this blind man was
not only born blind, he was actually born without eyes. This, they say, is why Jesus takes clay and
places them upon the empty sockets, essentially forming eyes for this man. When he washes them in the waters of Siloam,
the eyes of clay became real eyes with perfect sight. It’s a great story, but the real gist of this
story is about us.
But today, on Lataere Sunday, as we
head into the latter part of Lent, we find ourselves being relieved for a bit
of the heavy sense of brokenness we have been dealing with throughout Lent so
far. We see a bit of clarity in our
vision. Lataere Sunday, also known as Rose Sunday or Mothering Sunday or
Refreshment Sunday—is a break in our Lenten half-light.
Today, even in Lent, we can be joyful. It is a time for us to realize that our
brokenness is not an eternal brokenness. We realize today that no matter how broken or
fractured we might seem, we can be made whole once again. No matter how blind or nearsighted we might be
spiritually, our spiritual sight can be returned to us once again. And in doing so, we find ourselves almost
chuckling over our brokenness, over our blindness.