“Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must
the Son of Man be lifted up, so that everyone who believes in him may
have eternal life…For God did not send his Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.”
These words certainly tell us how the Cross of Christ
embodies God’s love and mercy for us in spite of our undeniable
wretchedness. It’s where we can deal properly with our wounded, sinful
condition here on earth.
Yes, Christ preached. He performed miracles. But in the end,
he had to offer his life on the cross because no matter what he did,
our sins are such that they simply cannot be undone and forgiven
through the preaching of the truths of our faith and the tremendous
effects of the miracles. Christ has to offer his life on the cross!
We might ask, if Christ is God, why did he have to go
through all that suffering and death? Why not just say, “Everything is
now all right, guys.” As God, nothing is impossible with him. With the
movement of his will, with a flick of his hand, everything would be as
it should be.
Be that as it may, the fact is that Christ chose the way the
Father wanted it. “Not my will, but yours be done,” Christ said. (Lk
22,42) And I imagine the reason behind this is because God respects
our human nature as it is, as it has been created by him, capable of
loving and hating, and also capable of being faithful and unfaithful
and faithful again after some conversion.
The return to fidelity, given our nature, will unavoidably
involve suffering and death which Christ took to himself. It shows us
the way of how to go about these consequences of our sins.
That is why, it’s always recommendable to meditate often on
the passion, death and resurrection of Christ, so we would learn to
have some healthy abhorrence against sin and temptations, as well as
to develop the capacity to suffer calmly with Christ to make up for
our unavoidable sins.
This is the purpose of the cross in our life. It is to
instil in us the proper attitude and virtues with respect to our sin,
before it is committed and also after it is committed. It’s in the
Cross of Christ where we can find divine mercy and the fullness of our
redemption.
It might be useful to repeat in our mind, heart and lips
that reassuring psalm of God’s mercy and the fullness of our
redemption (Ps 130,7), so that we would always be motivated by God’s
love in all our earthly affairs, especially when we encounter
difficulties, setbacks, failures, and even temptations and sin.
That would surely enliven our faith and keep us united with
God in all the events of our day. We should have no doubt whatsoever
that on the part of God, everything is already given to us so we can
be what we ought to be—children of God, sharers of God’s life. Any
doubt in this regard can only come from the devil.
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