TEXT: Fifth Sunday of Lent, March 22, 2026

March 22, 2026 Father De Celles Homily


5th Sunday of Lent

March 22, 2026

Homily by Fr. John De Celles

St. Raymond of Peñafort Catholic Church

Springfield, VA


Today’s Gospel reading is like a treasure chest, full of precious gems

            whose different facets can be admired from different perspectives,

            and in different lights.

Today I’d like us to look at a few of these gems

            from the unique perspective of the family

            and in light of the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ.


Of course, the central character in this text, as in all Scripture,

            is Jesus Himself.

But surrounding Him today are a family of three siblings:

            Martha, Mary and Lazarus.

As the text reminds us several times,

            Jesus loved this family in a very special way.

I’ve always wondered why this was,

            and it seems to me that the key to understanding it

            is the intriguing character of the youngest sister, Mary.


Now, some of you, if not most of you,

            have by now heard my devotion to this Mary,

            and my understanding about who this “Mary” of Bethany really is.

So, I’ll just briefly remind you.

While some modern scholars might disagree,

            for at least 1400 years the Church has identified this Mary of Bethany

            with the woman the Gospels call “Mary Magdalene”

            who is considered to have been a great repentant sinner,

            most probably a former prostitute.

Still, not much is known for sure about the life of this Mary.

But one can only imagine the terrible things that happened to her to break her away from her happy and apparently prosperous home

            in the very Jewish town of Bethany in Southern Israel,

            just two miles from Jerusalem,

            to lead her to the life of sin and sexual promiscuity

            in the Northern Gentile town of Magdala, over 100 miles away.


Perhaps there was a falling out.

Perhaps as an innocent young girl she was seduced

            and scandalized the family.

But something terrible led her, or forced her, away to a life of sin.

And loneliness.

Until one day in Magdala,

            she encounters a man from the nearby tiny village of Nazareth.

But this is no ordinary man:

            He is a rabbi, a prophet, and even a wonderworker.

Perhaps she was even there when He raised a boy from the dead

            in the neighboring village of Nain.

Even more amazing, this holy man of God

            eats with tax collectors and other public sinners

            —even with prostitutes.


So, she is drawn to listen to Him

            and comes to hope, and then to believe,

            in His call to repentance and promise of God’s mercy and forgiveness.

One night when He’s eating in the house of a rich Pharisee,

            she comes to Him, falls at His feet,

            covering them with a flood of tears of guilt and sorrow and faith and love,

            drying them with her hair and anointing them with oil.

And Jesus tells her,

            “[Your] sins, which are many, are forgiven, for [you have] loved much…

                        Your faith has saved you.”


Perhaps all this, by the grace of Christ, is what allows her

            to return to the home of her surviving family, Martha and Lazarus.

Amazed and grateful at the change and return of their sister,

            they come to believe in Jesus as well.


Is there any wonder that this family loved Jesus so much?

Or that He loved them so specially?


So, we can also imagine how when Lazarus became sick

            their natural response was to send for Jesus.

But Jesus didn’t come as fast as they had hoped, and Lazarus dies.

Yet both sisters have such strong faith in who He is,

            and in His personal love for their family,

            that when He does arrive, they both, although separately,

            run out to meet Him and say,

                        “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”


Martha goes on to add a beautiful prayer of faith:

            “But even now I know that whatever you ask of God,

            [He] will give you.”

While Mary doesn’t add this same prayer of faith,  

            the prayer she does add is even more beautiful.

She simply falls at His feet and weeps,

            just as she did when she first visited Him at the Pharisee’s house

            and washed His feet with her tears.

            But now her adoration at His feet and her tears of sorrow

            are a more eloquent prayer than any words could say.

And in response to the faith and love—and the prayers—of these two sisters,

            Jesus, who had once before restored Mary to this family,

            now restored Lazarus to this same family.


But Jesus didn’t come into the world to give this particular family

            just some temporary relief from their sins and illnesses and death.

He came to destroy all sin and death once and for all.

So, in listening to the prayers of faithful Martha and repentant Mary

            and raising Lazarus from the dead,

            He points them to His own death on the cross and the resurrection

            as the sources of enduring victory over sin and of everlasting life:

                        “I am the resurrection and the life;

                        whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live.”


Today there are many troubled families in the world.

Families crippled by illness or addiction, greed or poverty.

Families decimated by a warped sense of the meaning

            of family, marriage and sexuality.

Families torn apart by sin and devastated by sickness and death.

In fact, the family of Bethany is not so different than many of ours.

Think about that.


There’s Mary, who was at one point totally corrupted by terrible sins,

            especially sins of the flesh: drugs, alcohol, and sex.

With all the corruption in our society today,

            with public figures embracing the abuse of drugs and alcohol,

            such abuse becomes a new rite of passage for our young.

And there’s all the pornography and perversion thrown at us 24 hours a day,

            so much of it sneaking, slithering like a silent serpent,

            into our very homes through the internet and cable.

How many families have a member caught up in this

            —or on the road to this?


And there’s Lazarus

            —decimated by illness, even to the point of dying, and beyond.

How many families have had to deal with the devastating effects of

            cancer, or MS, or Alzheimers, whether in the old or in the young?

And how many have had to deal with untimely death:

            the death of a young mother of small children;

            the death of an older husband

            you’d planned to enjoy a happy retirement with;

            or the death of a child who had hardly begun life,

                        and yet had given meaning and purpose to his parents’ lives?


And then there’s Martha.

We remember the story of how she got so upset

            when she was working so hard trying to take care of Jesus

            and her sister Mary simply sat at His feet.

How many women have been left to take care of families

            while their husbands were absent,

            perhaps off nobly fighting for their country,

            or perhaps not so nobly off caught up in their careers?

Or the young husband abandoned by his wife,

            left to raise his tiny children all alone?

Or the oldest son or daughter who had to grow up too fast,

            becoming so responsible and loving,

            but also the one that everyone took advantage of–and took for granted?


Every family has problems.

And there is only one solution to these and all the problems of families,

            whether 2000 years ago or today.

The name of that solution is “Jesus Christ.”

Until and unless families, and members of families,

            can imitate Martha and Mary,

            repenting of sins,

            calling out for Jesus when we encounter problems,

            and having faith in Him and His complete power over these problems,

            and trusting that He will help us,

            we will continue to be plagued and even crushed by these problems.


Christ is at the center of Lazarus’ family.

Is He at the center of your family?

Is He living in your home, eating at your meals,

            laughing when you laugh, weeping when you weep?

Is there someone in your family who everyone relies on,

            but whose love is usually just taken for granted?

Is there someone who is sick, or dying, or mourning the death of someone?

Is there someone in your family who has fallen into sin

            and separated themselves in one way or another from the family?

Is that “someone” you?


The Lord Jesus loves the family.

He loves the family of Lazarus, and He loves your family.

And He loves each member of the family,

            even the ones far away from home.

And He alone can forgive all sins, heal all wounds, reconcile all divisions,

            by His Cross that conquers the sins that destroy family life,

            and by His Resurrection that lifts up the family

            to share in His own perfect life.


Today, as we continue to prepare for Good Friday and Easter,

            we look for Jesus to come to us and restore us and our families.

And in the next two weeks He will come to us in many different ways,

            but most profoundly in two ways:

            through His Church

            –which is the family of His brothers and sisters—

            and through His sacraments.

In the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and Penance

            He gives us a share in His life, and the gifts to actually live that life,

            and the forgiveness to restore us to that life when we’ve lost it.

And in His most Blessed Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist,

            He comes to us most perfectly as He brings us completely

            into the saving mystery of His Cross and Resurrection.


As we enter now into the mysteries of the Eucharist,

            let us meditate on the family that Jesus loved in Bethany.

Let us fall down at His feet in adoring love, faith and trust,

            and ask Him to come to us to restore us and our families with His love.


“Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.

But even now I know that whatever you ask of God, he will give you.”