"Is anything too hard for the LORD?" (Genesis 18:14)
Three men appear at Abraham's tent in the heat of the day. He runs to meet them, bows down, and urges them to stay. He hastens to prepare a feast: curds and milk and a calf, the full hospitality of the ancient Near East. The Christian tradition has read the three visitors as a manifestation of the Trinity, and the great icon of the Trinity by Andrei Rublev depicts this scene. The Catechism identifies this encounter as one of the most significant Trinitarian theophanies in the Old Testament, the three visitors whose unity and distinction foreshadow the one God in three persons (CCC 2571).
As the meal ends, one of them asks: where is Sarah your wife? She is told she will have a son within a year. Sarah, listening in the tent doorway, laughs to herself: after I am worn out and my lord is old, will I now have this pleasure? The LORD asks Abraham: why did Sarah laugh? Is anything too hard for the LORD? At the appointed time I will return and Sarah will have a son. Sarah denies that she laughed; she is afraid. The LORD says: yes, you did laugh. The scene is tender and human: the laughter of disbelief, the gentle exposure of it, the promise maintained regardless. Nothing is too hard for the LORD.
As the men leave toward Sodom, the LORD reveals to Abraham his intention regarding the city. Abraham draws near and begins the great intercession: will you sweep away the righteous with the wicked? What if there are fifty righteous people in the city? He negotiates God down from fifty to forty-five to forty to thirty to twenty to ten. If ten righteous are found, God will not destroy it. The Catechism identifies Abraham's intercession as the model of all contemplative prayer: a bold, persistent, humble engagement with God on behalf of others, rooted in friendship with the one who has shared his plans (CCC 2571).
Brothers and sisters, is anything too hard for the LORD? The question was asked over an elderly barren woman who laughed at the idea of childbirth. It is the question asked over every impossible situation in your life, every prayer that seems beyond the range of reasonable hope. Nothing is too hard for the LORD. Let that be the foundation of every prayer you bring today.
Lord God, is anything too hard for you? You promised Sarah a son when she had given up hope. You heard Abraham's intercession for the righteous. Nothing is too hard for you. We bring before you the people and situations that seem beyond hope. Act as only you can. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.