WE have to
understand well the role of a mediator. He is
like a bridge that connects two ends. A perfect mediator
is one where
he is both in the one end as in the other. He just cannot
be in one
end but not in the other, though he may orient or dispose
himself to
the other without reaching it.
Christ is a
mediator between God and man. In fact, he is
the sole perfect mediator because he is both God and man.
St. Paul
testified to this truth of our faith. He said, “There is
one God and
one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus…”
(1 Tim 2,5)
Christ is the
perfect mediator because he is not only God
but is also man. And he is not only man, but also God. As
the
Athanasian Creed would put it, Christ is “perfect God and
perfect
man.” He is not half God and half man. The two natures,
divine and
human, are together in him inseparably without diluting
each other. He
is not a ‘mestizo.’
This truth of
our faith is, of course, a mystery. We
cannot fully understand it. But we believe it because
Christ said so
and this is what the Church now teaches. “I and the
Father are one,”
Christ said at one time, pointing to his divinity. (Jn
10,30)
As to his
humanity, St. Paul said these relevant words:
“When the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of
a woman, born
under the law, to redeem those under the law, that we
might receive
the full rights of sons.” (Gal 4,4-5) Only a man could be
“born under
the law.”
This little
explanation about the mediator is important
and relevant because we, as human persons, patterned
after Christ,
have to learn the ways of a mediator. Of course, of all
men and women,
the priests are especially meant to be mediators, because
they are at
the forefront of the task of reconciling men with God.
With the
sacrament of Holy Orders, they are configured to
Christ, head of the Church, and participate in Christ’s
task of
mediation in a very intimate way. That is why priests, of
all men and
women, have to be particularly adept in this art of
mediation.
While they are
already sacramentally configured to Christ
as head of the Church, they have the special, albeit very
demanding,
duty of truly assuming the mind and heart of Christ. If
everyone is
meant to be “another Christ,” the priests have to be
particularly so.
They have to lead the way.
This can mean
many things. Their mind and heart should be
both on heaven even as they are on earth. They should
exude the
fragrance of heaven even as they can also have the odor
of earth, just
like what Pope Francis said about priests as
shepherds—they have to
have the smell of the sheep which they tend.
Like Christ,
they have to identify closely both with God
and with men. Like Christ, they have to pray constantly
so as to be
always in touch with God whose will and ways they have to
follow.
Let’s remember
that Christ said: “I have come down from
heaven, not to do my will, but to do the will of him who
sent me.” (Jn
6,38)
Like Christ,
priests have to mix well with the people,
adapting themselves to them all the way to assuming their
sins without
committing sin. In this regard, St. Paul said: “God made
him who knew
no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that in him we might
become the
righteousness of God.” (2 Cor 5,21)
Just imagine
what practical considerations can be made
from this ideal of priests as mediators like Christ!
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