Homily
5th Sunday of Lent A
March 22, 2026
St. Ann Catholic Church Prairie Village, KS
AMDG
Would you rather experience a confession or a resuscitation? Most of us would say the latter. I avoid confession but would love to see a loved one come back from the dead. My mom will have been gone 25 years this March 30th. It still breaks my heart.
I don't really want to hear 1000 confessions this week. It's hell week for priests. Penance services non-stop. It could easily be 1000 confessions by Easter. I'm not complaining. I have the best job in the world. But there's 5000 of you. Hearing 1000 confession would only be 20%.
What would Jesus rather see? A resuscitation or a confession? You know the answer. It's written all over today's Gospel.
It breaks his heart that his friend Lazarus experienced physical death. It breaks his heart 1000x more when I don't use confession.
Physical death is not supposed to be that scary or threatening to faith. But it is, for all of us. Take it from two saints, Mary and Martha, who give voice to my experience of death. Lord, you could have done something. Why do you stay distant is the face of physical death. If you had been here, my mother would not have died. Jesus is the worst first responder in history. When he finds out that his best friend is dead, he freezes. He remained where he was for two days.
But physical death is not threatening to God. He can make something from nothing. He can create from dust. It's nothing for him to resuscitate or resurrect. He was ridiculed for saying the daughter of Jairus and the son of the widow in Nain were merely sleeping. He gets perturbed when people are so fearful of death. He is the resurrection and the life. For him physical death is nothing. He asks the Marys if they trust this. If they believe it.
So why does Jesus weep? Why does he let his heart break? It's to show how devastated He would be if my life ended in spiritual death. It's to show what it will cost Him to forgive my sins. It's because of my stubbornness of heart and slowness to believe that His heart is broken.
Which is to say he weeps when I don't go to confession. Which is the converse of His rejoicing more over one sinner who repents than over 99 people who skip confession. He cries that I try to hold on stubbornly to my bios when He wants only to restore my zoe, the Spirit of God dwelling in me.
As a sign of how much He wants to forgive my sins, He call Lazarus out of the tomb. This sixth and penultimate sign in John's Gospel is about the forgiveness of my sins. Lazarus goes into the confessional stinky dead; he emerges from the tomb alive again in the Holy Spirit.
My heart breaks for what breaks Jesus heart. When you settle for bios when you are meant for zoe.
Which means I'll see you in confession this week. It's not really hell week, but confess to beat hell week.
What does your heart break for? Is it for your friends who have lost their bios or their zoe? Would you rather see a resuscitation or a confession?
+mj