To start, a mediator is like a bridge that links two ends
together. An intermediary tries to act like a bridge but lacks some
requirements that would effectively link the two ends. An intercessor
simply helps one party from one end to reach the other end.
All three agents play in our human drama of sorting out
and settling our unavoidable differences and conflicts that can vary
in character from the not-so-serious to the very serious, from matters
of opinions only to those of core beliefs, and ultimately from the
natural to the supernatural.
As social beings, we need to relate ourselves to others,
first to God who is our original Father being our Creator, and then to
everybody else. It’s in these relationships that we need a mediator,
an intermediary and an intercessor.
Strictly speaking, a mediator can only be applied to one
who can link us to God. In this relationship, we in theory would not
need an intermediary, since an intermediary cannot be both God and man
that can truly offer the link between the two ends of the natural in
us and the supernatural end that we are supposed to attain.
In this relationship between God and us, there can only be
one mediator who should be both God and man. And that could only be
Jesus Christ, who is the Son of God and God himself, as well as man
who was born of the Virgin Mary.
Thus, in the first letter of St. Paul to Timothy, he
clearly said: “There is one God and one mediator between God and
mankind, the man Christ Jesus…” (2,5) It is only Christ who is the one
perfect mediator between God and us.
And that’s because he is the Son of God, the second Person
of the Blessed Trinity, and therefore is a divine person. And this
divine person assumed also our human nature. Thus, Christ is first of
all a divine person with two natures, divine and human, a perfect
bridge that links God and man.
As man, Christ adapted himself all the way to the worst
condition of man that is caused by sin if only to recover man to his
original dignity as image and likeness of God, a child of his and
meant to share in God’s divine life. He did this ultimately through
his passion, death and resurrection.
An intermediary may be resorted to in settling the
differences and conflicts among ourselves, although we may loosely use
the term mediator for this purpose. But let’s be cautious about
intermediaries as Pope Francis warned us in his latest encyclical,
“Fratelli tutti.”
The quote is as follows: “As religious leaders, we are
called to be true ‘people of dialogue’, to cooperate in building peace
not as intermediaries but as authentic mediators. Intermediaries seek
to give everyone a discount, ultimately in order to gain something for
themselves. The mediator, on the other hand, is one who retains
nothing for himself, but rather spends himself generously until he is
consumed, knowing that the only gain is peace.” (284)
A human mediator can only be effective if he tries his
best to act like Christ.
No comments:
Post a Comment