St. Therese, Habitat tackle community cleanup project

JACKSON – More than 100 volunteers descended on Greenview Drive, right next to St. Therese Parish on Saturday, March 15, to start tearing down and building up. They were from at least three different denominations as well as Habitat for Humanity and their goal was to start a revitalization for the street and surrounding area.

 Shonda and Kaitlyn de Verteuil with Father Norbert N’Zilamba, OPraem, pastor of St. Therese Parish, bag leaves during a cleanup day near the church. (Photo by Kerryn de Verteuil)

Shonda and Kaitlyn de Verteuil with Father Norbert N’Zilamba, OPraem, pastor of St. Therese Parish, bag leaves during a cleanup day near the church. (Photo by Kerryn de Verteuil)

Kerryn de Verteuil, a Knight of Columbus at St. Therese, organized volunteers from his parish. “We want to remove the blight from South Jackson,” he said. “We’re going to have homeowners here who care about their community. Our land value is going to go up. We’re going to have new people to come to our church and school,” he said.

Several homes on Greenview Drive were abandoned and beyond repair. Habitat was able to purchase these properties and get permits to tear them down and make the street safer and cleaner. While they were at it, organizers decided to clean up the rest of the block as well. Habitat executives said the area has great potential for revitalization.

“You don’t often see a street as blighted as Greenview Drive have such strong community assets and anchors. These anchors include St. Therese Church and School, Peeples Middle School, Key Elementary, the Richard Wright Library, McDowell Road, proximity to the JSU e-Center, close access to I-20, and the stable home ownership on Treehaven Street,” explained Cindy Griffin, executive director of Habitat’s Mississippi Capital Area. “By revitalizing Greenview Drive, we can create an economic engine in South Jackson. More importantly, though, we can change lives – for the families who currently live there and for potential homeowners.

“The dream of those who came together Saturday on Greenview Drive, as well as others who support this work, is that the demolition and clean-up on March 15 will be a catalyst for revitalization of the entire street,” Griffin said.

The project came about thanks in part to an ecumenical effort on the part of the South Jackson Ministerial Association/Alliance, a group of churches who work together to improve their communities.

A member of that group met with the Billy Graham Evangelistic Crusade, who brought in even more churches. Wanda McCurdy with the Billy Graham group said her organization comes into a community to host a crusade with as many churches as may be interested. Before the actual crusade, the group likes to do some sort of service work. This project was just the right fit.

 Habitat volunteers clean up debris and use heavy lawn equipment to cut an overgrown lot.

Habitat volunteers clean up debris and use heavy lawn equipment to cut an overgrown lot.

“It was just such a rewarding thing for me and our group to see what a big difference we could make just lending a hand,” she said.

The actual demolition was handled by a contractor. The volunteers took to the other properties with heavy lawn equipment, rakes, shovels and lots and lots of trash bags. Since the street is close to at least three schools one of the goals was to pick up anything that might pose a threat to the kids walking to and from school including glass, exposed wires and other trash.

The cleanup was a first step, but Habitat is hoping individuals, churches, businesses or civic groups will step up to start planning the revitalization portion of the project.

Immigration advocates urge tuition equality

By Elsa Baughman
JACKSON – Immigrant-rights advocates, including Catholic Charities, gathered recently at the State Capitol to meet with Representatives Gregory Holloway, Reecy Dickson, and other legislators to discuss ways of changing state law to allow for undocumented students, protected under the Deferred Action Program, to pay in-state tuition rates.

Representative Holloway, vice chair of the House Universities and Colleges Committees organized the hearing. During the 2014 legislative session House Bill 209, a proposal authored by Representative Reecy Dixon, D-Macon, failed to make it out of the House Education Committee.

Representing Catholic Charities at the hearing were Greg Patin, executive director, Monique Davis, director of Parish Based Ministries, and Teresita Turner, director of the Migrant Support Center.

Patin said Catholic Charities supports the in-state tuition for undocumented students because, “These young people have a lot to offer to our community and to our state.
“They were brought here as young children by their parents and this is the only home they know. To allow them to attend a university paying in-state tuition is the only fair thing to do,” he said.

Adrian Gamboa, an undocumented college student from Biloxi, gave his testimony, saying he pays almost twice what his high school classmates pay in tuition at the Jefferson Davis campus in Gulfport.

Immigration attorney Patricia Ice mentioned that 16 states already have provisions allowing for in-state tuition rates for undocumented students.

At end of the hearing Rep. Holloway said he would consider commissioning a study to see how successful the law has been in those 16 states and what the economic impact on the state would be if a similar bill were to pass in Mississippi.

Virginia Tech students serve Mound Bayou

By Jacob Clore
MOUND BAYOU – Ten individuals from the Newman Catholic Community at Virginia Tech spent their spring break serving in Mound Bayou.

Virginia Tech students prepare soil on wire frames during their spring break service trip. (Story and photos submitted by LaToya Lee)

Virginia Tech students prepare soil on wire frames during their spring break service trip. (Story and photos submitted by LaToya Lee)

The group is part of the Newman Outreach Projects (NOP) a series of trips organized by the Newman Community to serve those in need. The NOP serves communities in nine cities in the US and abroad during the school’s winter and spring breaks. The organization focuses on connecting with the communities in addition to performing service.

“We are called out of love to serve people in need in a variety of settings,” Father David Sharland, the group’s chaplain said. “We are here to be available to the local community and serve it any way that they see fit.”

Students from Virgina Tech build a flower bed and landscape the area around the Mound Bayou Mercy Center as part of a weeklong service trip in March.

Students from Virgina Tech build a flower bed and landscape the area around the Mound Bayou Mercy Center as part of a weeklong service trip in March.

Throughout the week, the group served in Mound Bayou and the surrounding communities. While at St. Gabriel Mercy Center, the students worked on projects including washing the center’s vehicles, planting crepe myrtle trees and visiting with the seniors who come the center every day.

They also trimmed hedges and cut grass at city hall and raked leaves at the homes of senior citizens.

The students also worked in Shelby with Mississippi Engaged in Greener Agriculture (MEGA) by planting seeds in the greenhouse at Alcorn State University Research Center.
“I enjoyed the manual labor part of it because we were actually doing something tangible,” junior Brianne Varnerin said. “You could see how much we got done.”

The volunteers slept and ate at Cleveland Our Lady of Victories Parish Hall. The members of the church community made the students feel very welcome.  “It has been great,” Senior Tom Zamadics said. “Three or four families offered to take us out to eat. They really made it feel like home.”

By the end of the week the students grew in their Catholic faith and became closer with one another as a result of their experiences in Mound Bayou. The experience also left a lasting impression on the community.

“The students are energetic, competent, and eager to do whatever needs to be done,” Sister Donald Mary, Director at St. Gabriel Mercy Center, said. “They give service joyfully and energetically.”

Joy of Gospel frees us from death

By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
Lazarus, Martha and Mary were siblings, dear friends of Jesus who lived in Bethany, within walking distance of Jerusalem. The death of Lazarus, only recorded in John’s Gospel, was about to draw Jesus and his disciples to Bethany in the shadow of Jerusalem and with the specter of his own passion on the horizon.
Many forces are pressing upon Jesus and they are about to coalesce with the death of a dear friend.

Jesus was not immediately on hand when Lazarus died, and he and his disciples were faced with a difficult choice. The scripture states explicitly that Jesus dearly loved Lazarus, Martha and Mary, and his desire to be with them is understandable. However, one of his disciples, speaking for the rest, dissuaded him from going, reminding him that there were many who hated him, seeking to ensnare and kill him. At a deeper level Jesus knew that the death of a dear friend was going to reveal the depth of his identity in such a way that there would be no turning back.

Life and death, friends and enemies, love and hate, grief and hope swirled around Jesus, and out of this pressure cooker he prays aloud so intensely that heaven and earth were moved. At the tomb of Lazarus, with tears pouring out of him, his prayer to the Father reveals the love that is stronger than death. “Father I give you thanks because you have heard me. I know that you always hear me, but I have said it for the sake of the crowd who surround me, that they may believe that you have sent me.”

Martha had earlier professed in conversation with Jesus that he is the resurrection and life, and his prayer is that all can make this leap of faith.
In the next breath Jesus groans and shouts, “Lazarus, come out.” With the appearance of the dead man, the saving work of Jesus on behalf of his friend reaches its culmination, “untie him, and let him go free.”

This year the gospel of Lazarus is proclaimed on this weekend, the fifth Sunday of Lent, one week before the beginning of Holy Week. We too stand in the shadow of Jerusalem with the commemoration of our Lord’s passion and death on the horizon.  Standing before the shadow of death we want to proclaim that Jesus Christ is the resurrection and life, and through him, and with him, and in him, our prayer is always heard. Standing in the light of the cross and resurrection, we want to know that through faith Jesus unties us and sets us free.

What are the forces in our lives that ensnare or enslave us, compromising or demolishing our freedom?  Where do we need the power of Jesus to restore us and set us free? As he was about to resuscitate Lazarus from death back into life, Martha said to him, “Lord it has been four days; there is going to be a bad stench.” Saint Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits, understood such an odor when he stated that, “there is a stench to sin.”
What sin in our own lives fouls the fresh air of the light of faith? Has it been four days, four years, or possibly forty years? Our journey through Lent marked by prayer, fasting and almsgiving, is a walk we take with the Lord in order to know a greater freedom through the forgiveness of our sins, or to know a greater freedom by overcoming the paralysis of spirit prompted by fear, doubt and shame.

Sometimes there are more subtle forces at work that enslave us.  At the very beginning of his Apostolic Exhortation, The Joy of the Gospel, Pope Francis addresses these currents of spiritual death. “The great danger in today’s world, pervaded by consumerism, is the desolation and anguish born of a complacent yet covetous heart, the feverish pursuit of frivolous pleasures, and a blunted conscience.

Whenever our interior life becomes caught up in its own interests and concerns, there is no longer room for others, no place for the poor. God’s voice is no longer heard, the quiet joy of his love is no longer felt, and the desire to do good fades… That is no way to live a dignified and fulfilled life; it is not God’s will for us, nor is it the life in the Spirit which has its source in the heart of the risen Christ.”

Enslaved in such a way, we can never really know the joy of the Gospel. “Untie him and let him go free.”  Such life-giving words coming from the heart of God reveal the depths of our Lord’s love for all of us, and his desire to shatter whatever entombs us. Set free, we can know the joy of the Gospel, God’s will for us and for the world and we can unfold in the light of day.

Retired priests make gifts of time, talent

By Maureen Smith
MADISON – Ask a retired priest what he does and he will probably say, ‘not much.’ Ask someone at his parish or school and you will get a very different story. Cases in point, Father Edward Balser and Father Alfred Camp.

After a lifetime of service to the church they are spending their retirement continuing to help.

Father Balser is a master carpenter. He uses the shop in his home to design and build almost anything you can imagine for kids from toys and custom changing tables to a portable dress-up station. All of his creations find their home in the early learning centers of the diocese.“He co

mes to visit and he asks me what we need,” said Jennifer Henry, director of Flowood St. Paul Early Learning Center. He created a changing table for the 2-year-old classroom with stairs attached so the toddlers could climb up themselves. “The craftsmanship is just beautiful,” added Henry. She said items he made for Madison St. Francis of Assisi Early Learning Center many years ago are as solid as ever.

Henry said someone on her staff saw a picture of a closet for dress-up clothes. They showed it to Father Balser and he designed one “even better,” said Henry. He put it on wheels so the classes could share it and even filled it with dress-up outfits before he delivered it. He donates his time and all the supplies needed for the furniture and toys.

 Jack N., Olivia H. and Jordan D. at Flowood St. Paul Early Learning Center play with toys made by retired pastor Father Edward Balser. He also made the table and shelves.


Jack N., Olivia H. and Jordan D. at Flowood St. Paul Early Learning Center play with toys made by retired pastor Father Edward Balser. He also made the table and shelves.

He does not think of the work as work. “It’s not that religious, but it is for the church,” he explained. “I love carpentry and I love those little kids,” he said. “I have a full shop and that’s what I do to stay busy,” he added.

Father Camp is a familiar face at Madison St. Anthony School. “I try to teach Latin to sixth graders,” he joked, adding that the students really are interested and have good language and learning skills. Father Camp spent most of his career as a Latin teacher, first in the seminary and then for 20 years “or so” in Vicksburg. About five years ago Msgr. Flannery asked if he would be interested in offering Latin in the elementary school. He said he wants to introduce the children to the idea of Latin and Roman culture.

“Father Camp greatly enriches the community of St. Anthony.  To the students he shares his knowledge of Latin. To the staff he shares his wisdom and experience of many years working in Catholic schools.  Most importantly, he supports the St. Anthony families and community with his prayers and ever present smile. We are blessed to have Father Camp, a retired priest, teaching at our school,” said Mamie

 Father Alfred Camp continues to minister at Madison St. Anthony School as a teacher and confessor. (Photos by Elsa Baughman and Maureen Smith)


Father Alfred Camp continues to minister at Madison St. Anthony School as a teacher and confessor. (Photos by Elsa Baughman and Maureen Smith)

Sheldrick, development director of St. Anthony. Both priests try to help out when their brother priests are out of town. Father Balser said he tries to help out when the Irish priests go home in the summer, celebrating Masses and hearing confessions where needed.

The diocese supports more than a dozen retired priests through the Catholic Service Appeal, which allocates $70,000 to make sure their needs are met. That figure is sure to rise as more priests from the diocese reach retirement age. Your donation is a way to thank those men who spent their lives in service, both during their active ministry and in retirement. The appeal is getting close to this year’s goal, but still needs support. Donate through your parish or online at https://csa.jacksondiocese.org.

Journey of Hope inspires

By Jennifer Kelemen
NATCHEZ – More than 200 guests joined Catholic Charities at St. Mary’s Basilica Family Life Center on Friday, March 21, for a Journey of Hope luncheon. The attendees were joined by Bishop Joseph Kopacz, Msgr. Elvin Sunds, Vicar General, Father David O’Connor, pastor, Donna Miller, director of the Guardian Shelter for Battered Families and Greg Patin, executive director of Catholic Charities.

Greg Patin

Greg Patin

The Journey of Hope provides much needed financial support for the many services offered by Catholic Charities, including counseling, domestic violence services, emergency assistance services, homelessness prevention and rapid re-housing, rape crisis center and the parish health ministry.

The keynote speaker, B.C., a survivor of domestic abuse who benefited greatly from Catholic Charities, shared her story as a way to show the impact the organization can have. She said she was bounced from house to house as a young child. She rode the bus with a boy for a year before she realized that he was her brother.

C. told how she ended up in a relationship with a man who physically and mentally abused her. The police became involved and directed her to the Guardian Shelter. She was 7-and-half months pregnant and hadn’t received any neonatal care, and had three small children in her care. The shelter was able to get her medical care and provide a safe home. She left the shelter twice, once out of fear she would be found, but eventually returned determined to make a new life.

 Bishop Joseph Kopacz speaks with an attendee at the Journey of Hope luncheon in Natchez. (Photos by Msgr. Elvin Sunds)


Bishop Joseph Kopacz speaks with an attendee at the Journey of Hope luncheon in Natchez. (Photos by Msgr. Elvin Sunds)

C. said she would pray day and night for” just one year” without her abuser. After she returned to the shelter she learned her abuser had been sentenced to exactly one year in prison.

C. thanked the Lord and set about making serious changes in her life. She worked two jobs, bought a car and was chosen for a Habitat for Humanity home.
She attends Alcorn State University, and her children are now thriving in school.  M. has also started her own foundation. “It still takes a village to raise our children,” which honors students who have lost a parent, but are continuing their education.

C. credits Catholic Charities and the Guardian Shelter with giving her the  tools she needed to transform her life and  the lives of her children. Her testimony inspired many of those attending the lunch to support the programs Catholic Charities offers.

Cathedral shares Holy Week with diocese

JACKSON – In the early developments of church structure as Christianity began to spread into Europe in the first few centuries after it became legal in the Roman Empire, the Cathedral was the focal point of church life. Clergy were stationed at the Cathedral and would visit the mission areas during the week for liturgy. The central liturgical life of the local church revolved around large Sunday liturgies with the bishop as celebrant.

Though our church has grown worldwide and dioceses have expanded to far reaching boundaries, the faithful gathered around the bishop in the cathedral remains an important tradition in the liturgical life of the church.

This year, Bishop Joseph Kopacz will lead a full week of liturgies in the Cathedral of Saint Peter the Apostle and invites the faithful to join him.

On Tuesday, April 15, at 5:45 p.m. Bishop Kopacz will celebrate the Mass of Chrism, where with the presbyterate gathered around him, he will bless the oils of catechumens and the sick and consecrate the Sacred Chrism. These oils presented to parish representatives will be taken back to home parishes and used throughout the year to anoint the sick and baptize infants and adults. The clergy will renew their priestly commitment at this Mass as well.

At 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 16, Bishop Kopacz will lead the Office of Tenebrae, an ancient part of the Liturgy of the Hours. Tenebrae, which means shadows or darkness in Latin, reflects on the sufferings of Jesus Christ while offering a glimmer of hope at the end in the one remaining lighted candle.

Tenebrae is a very moving ceremony that features readings from the Lamentations of Jeremiah, psalms and hymns on the cross and crown of thorns. After each reading, a candle on the altar is extinguished until only one is left burning.

Tenebrae is an excellent opportunity to bring your Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) elect and candidates to the Cathedral to participate in a unique ceremony of solemn prayer and reflection.

The Sacred Triduum begins and Lent officially ends with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper. on Holy Thursday. This year on April 17,  the Mass is filled with rituals and symbols revolving around the true meaning of the Eucharist – sacrifice and service. The Gospel reading from John is the washing of the disciples’ feet by Jesus. In the liturgy, 12 feet are washed by the priest who in the image of Christ reflects the servant hood of being a follower of Jesus.  At this liturgy a second ciborium of hosts is consecrated for distribution on Good Friday.

The final movement of the Holy Thursday liturgy is the transfer of the ciborium by procession to an area separate from the main altar perhaps even in another building. This area should be decorated with flowers to reflect the garden of Gethsemane where Jesus went to pray and was ultimately betrayed and also to foreshadow the garden tomb. The faithful are asked to pray with the Lord in the garden then leave in silence.

Good Friday, April 18, 5:30 p.m., is once again an ancient ritual – one of the oldest in the church’s centuries old liturgical tradition. The altar is bare, stripped of all ornamentation and the liturgy begins in silence. The starkness of the church is quite striking.
St. John’s passion narrative is read then, after the universal prayer of the church, a cross is processed to the altar for veneration. In this moving moment we are able to touch or kiss the cross knowing that so many have had trials and struggles in their lives throughout the past year.

Contrasting the starkness of Good Friday, the Easter Vigil at 8 p.m. on Saturday, April 19, and Easter Sunday Masses lift us from despair because we know the tomb is empty and the Lord has risen.

IN MEMORIAM: Deacon Larry Campbell

SOUTHAVEN – Deacon Lawrence (Larry) Campbell, 71, went to the Lord on Thursday, March 20, at Baptist DeSoto Hospital.

Deacon Campbell, a native of South Bend, Ind., and graduate of Christian Brothers University, was a retired permanent deacon in the Diocese of Jackson, having been ordained on June 9, 1979. He spent many years in youth and parish ministry at Southaven Christ the King as well as in youth ministry for the diocese.

Among other things, Deacon Campbell coordinated and led 17 youth missionary trips to Saltillo, Mexico. These trips helped form the lives of a generation of Catholic youth in Mississippi.

He took three bus loads of students from the diocese to the 1993 World Youth Day gathering in Denver, Colo. In addition, he organized trips for students to see Pope John Paul II in New Orleans and in St. Louis.

Deacon Campbell was involved in his community through ministry to the inmates at the jail in Hernando. As a Knight of Columbus, worked with the knights in their Tootsie Roll drives for many years to raise money for the intellectually disabled of DeSoto County. He also played Santa Claus at some of the DeSoto Industries Christmas parties. His service included the food pantry at Sacred Heart Southern Mission in Walls and the Samaritans in Horn Lake.

Deacon Campbell leaves his wife, Margaret (Noe) Campbell, two sons, Bryan and Christopher Campbell, and one daughter, Michele Stephens. He also leaves nine grandchildren, a sister, Patricia Lott, and a niece and nephew.

Services were held at Christ the King with visitation on Sunday evening, March 23, and a funeral Mass celebrated by Bishop Joseph Kopacz on Monday, March 24. Interment was at Forest Hill South Cemetery following the Mass.

The family requests that any donations in his honor be made to Christ the King Building Fund or to Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Jackson.

Sculptor ‘sings praise’ with hands

By Elsa Baughman
JACKSON – Dr. Samuel Gore says he can’t sing well enough to praise God with his voice but he can sing with his hands through sculpture. With complete concentration of mind and hands, using no instruments, in 20 minutes he transformed a block of clay into the face of Jesus with a crown of thorns.

 Dr. Samuel Gore sculpts the head of Jesus at St. Therese Parish.


Dr. Samuel Gore sculpts the head of Jesus at St. Therese Parish.

While his hands worked a dark brown block of clay and soft, instrumental music played in the background inside St. Therese Church, you could hear the whisper echo of ‘oohs!’ and praises from the audience.

Dr. Gore is an internationally acclaimed artist whose career as a painter, sculptor, and Mississippi College professor and art department chairman spans six decades.
Catholic photographer Barbara Gauntt, an adjunct instructor of photography at Mississippi College, has followed the artistic life of Dr. Gore since her years at The Clarion Ledger when she was occasionally assigned to cover his work. “I saw there was something special about him and knew something more in-depth needed to be done to show his art work,” she said.

So during one of her assignments she asked him if she could follow him and photograph his next work from conception to completion. “Unbeknownst to me that piece of art, ‘Christ’s fulfillment of the law,’ would take almost two years to do,” she said. That sculpture hangs now at the Mississippi College School of Law.

The photos she has taken of his work through the years and the stories she has written about him will be included in a book that is being co-published by University Press and Mississippi College due to be released at the end of the summer.

James Jackson, one of Dr. Gore’s students who accompanied him to the spiritual sculpting session at St. Therese, said it is a blessing, a privilege and a great inspiration to work with him. “He is a good mentor and a down-to-earth person, easy to talk to,” he noted. Jackson said he listens to everything Dr. Gore tells him because he has a lot of experience and knowledge and he can learn about life lessons from him.

His presentation in the Mississippi College website reads: I am accountable as an artist to my Creator for stewardship of life, gift, career and concept of Art. Working in the light of His awesome and beautiful works, I strive toward the level of mastery which is acceptable to Him according to that measure of gift or talent with which I was born.

His most familiar works include: “Jesus and the Children” on the Mississippi College campus in Clinton, “Working Man,” a 600-pound bronze sculpture at the Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Museum in Jackson; “Fallen Comrades,” a seven-foot bronze sculpture at the Clinton Visitors Center; and “Moses and the 10 Commandments” and “Jesus and His Disciples” an eight by 10 feet, 2,000-pound bronze piece at the Mississippi College School of Law in Jackson.

Resurrección de Lázaro

Por Obispo Joseph Kopacz
Lázaro, Marta y María eran hermanos, buenos amigos de Jesús, quien vivió en Betania, a poca distancia de Jerusalén. La muerte de Lázaro, registrada sólo en el Evangelio de Juan, atrajo a Jesús y a sus discípulos a Betania a la sombra de Jerusalén y con el espectro de su propia pasión en el horizonte.

Muchas fuerzas están presionando a Jesús y están a punto de fusionarse con la muerte de un querido amigo.

Jesús no estaba inmediatamente disponible cuando Lázaro murió y él y sus discípulos estaban frente a una difícil situación. La escritura declara expresamente que Jesús amaba a Lázaro a Marta y a María y su deseo de estar con ellos es comprensible. Sin embargo, uno de sus discípulos, hablando por el resto, lo disuadió de ir recordándole que habían muchos que lo odiaban, y que tratarían  de atraparlo y matarlo. A un nivel más profundo Jesús sabía que la muerte de un querido amigo iba a revelar la profundidad de su identidad de tal forma que no habría vuelta atrás.

Vida y muerte, amigos y enemigos, amor y odio, dolor y esperanza se arremolinaron alrededor de Jesús y fuera de esta olla de presión, él ora en voz alta y tan intensamente que el cielo y la tierra se movieron. En la tumba de Lázaro, con lágrimas en sus ojos, su oración al Padre revela el amor que es más fuerte que la muerte. “Padre, te doy gracias porque me has escuchado. Sé que siempre me escuchas, pero lo he dicho por el bien de la multitud que me rodea para que crean que tú me has enviado”. Marta ya había profesado en conversación con Jesús que él es la resurrección y la vida y su oración es que todos podemos hacer este salto de   fe.

Seguidamente Jesús gime y grita, “Lázaro, sal afuera”. Con la aparición del hombre muerto la obra salvífica de Jesús, en nombre de su amigo alcanza su culminación, “desátenlo y déjenlo ir”.

Este año, el evangelio de Lázaro se proclama este fin de semana, el quinto domingo de Cuaresma, una semana antes del inicio de la Semana Santa. También nosotros estamos a la sombra de Jerusalén con la conmemoración de la pasión y muerte de nuestro Señor en el horizonte. Ante la sombra de la muerte queremos anunciar que Jesucristo es la resurrección y la vida, y que a través de él, con él y en él, nuestra oración es siempre escuchada. Ante la luz de la cruz y la resurrección, queremos saber que a través de la fe Jesús nos desata y nos hace libres.

¿Cuáles son las fuerzas en nuestra vida que nos esclavizan o nos atrapan  comprometiendo o destruyendo nuestra libertad? ¿Dónde necesitamos el poder de Jesús para restaurarnos y liberarnos? Cuando estaba a punto de resucitar a Lázaro de la muerte hacia la vida, Marta le dijo, “Señor han pasado cuatro días, va a sentirse un mal olor”. San Ignacio de Loyola, el fundador de los Jesuitas, entendió tal olor cuando dijo “hay un olor a pecado”. ¿Qué pecado en nuestras propias vidas cambia el aire fresco de la luz de la fe? ¿Han sido cuatro días, cuatro años, o posiblemente 40 años?

Nuestro camino durante la Cuaresma, marcado por la oración, el ayuno y la limosna, es un caminar que hacemos con el Señor a fin de conocer una mayor libertad a través del perdón de nuestros pecados o para conocer una mayor libertad al superar la parálisis de espíritu dictada por el miedo, la duda y la vergüenza.

A veces hay fuerzas más sutiles en el trabajo que nos esclavizan. En su Exhortación Apostólica, “La alegría del Evangelio”, el Papa Francisco hace referencia a estas corrientes de muerte espiritual. “El gran peligro en el mundo de hoy impregnado por el consumismo, es la desolación y la angustia nacida de un corazón complaciente y codicioso, la febril búsqueda de placeres frívolos y una ruda conciencia.

“Cada vez que nuestra vida interior queda atrapada en sus propios intereses y preocupaciones ya no hay espacio para otros, no hay lugar para los pobres. La voz de Dios ya no se escucha, la serena alegría de su amor ya no se siente y el deseo de hacer el bien se desvanece… Esa no es una forma de vivir una vida digna y realizada, no es la voluntad de Dios para nosotros, tampoco es la vida en el Espíritu que tiene su fuente en el corazón de Cristo resucitado”.

Esclavizados de esa manera, nunca podremos conocer realmente la alegría del Evangelio. “Desátalo y déjalo libre”. Tales palabras, que vienen del corazón de Dios, revelan la profundidad del amor de nuestro Señor por todos nosotros y su deseo de destruir lo que nos sepulta. Una vez que seamos libres podemos conocer la alegría del Evangelio y la voluntad de Dios para nosotros y para el mundo y podemos desplegarnos en la luz del día.