The second reading mentions “justification” –
we don’t talk about this often,
so you might wonder just what that is.
From the Council of Trent and the Catechism we learn that
"Justification is not only the remission of sins,
but also the sanctification and renewal of the interior man.”
In other words, justification not only forgives us, but changes us.
And if we don’t change, what good is forgiveness?
The life of God is poured into our hearts and our lives.
In a word, we become saints. This happens in baptism.
Baptism! Ah, now you know why we heard the first reading
and the Gospel, all about water.
Of course, Jesus wasn’t just talking about ordinary water,
but the water of the Holy Spirit.
And you and I receive this water first in baptism.
Remember, there are friends and family members in our parish family
who have been drawn here by that same grace of God.
They are preparing to be born again in baptism in a few weeks.
What drew them was the grace of your baptism, your witness.
So this is even more a good time to talk about baptism.
In baptism you and I are justified; we become saints.
This coincides with something else baptism does:
it creates a new reality both in ourselves
and in our relationship with God.
A moment ago, I said that in baptism,
the life of God enters us; you can also turn that around:
In baptism, you and I enter the inner life of God!
When we sign ourselves, notice: “Father, Son and Holy Spirit”
That signifies that you or I are “surrounded” by the Blessed Trinity!
Baptism is the moment we fully and truly become children of God.
Now, the mystery to all this is the working out of grace in our lives.
A true revolution happens in us at the moment of baptism:
total forgiveness, total adoption, total sanctification.
And yet, this explosion of grace in each of us
doesn’t usually bring an instant change.
More often, each of us still has a zig-zaggy path to heaven.
The thing is, justification makes us truly free – free to say yes to God;
how it plays out is that our lives are a long chain
of daily, even hourly, yeses, mixed with nos.
Thank God, when you or I betray our baptism in mortal sin,
our baptism is renewed in the sacrament of confession.
St. Therese, the Little Flower, got frustrated
that she confessed the same sins over and over;
until she realized that if she won that battle too quickly,
she would fall prey to spiritual pride!
St. Therese’s example is a reminder to us:
Holiness isn’t one-and-done, but lifelong;
and not one, but all the sacraments sustain the life of God in us.
Notice something else striking: Jesus himself thirsted!
This is the amazing thing that is absolutely certain:
God thirsts infinitely for souls,
and whatever path to sanctity each of us treads, long or short,
straight or twisty, easy or rough –
God’s unwavering purpose is that each of us will be glorious saints!
Saint Augustine said that the justification of sinners
“is a greater work than the creation of heaven and earth,"
because "heaven and earth will pass away
but the salvation and justification of the elect . . . will not pass away."
Some of us look ahead to baptism; others of us are invited
to wake up again to that glorious gift we may have taken for granted.
This time of Lent is when, despite all our busyness,
you and I sit at the well again and say,
Lord, give me this water always!