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Dear
Stupid,
I hate your column. Your trite stories mixed with poor
theological statements make me sick to my stomach. Please,
for the love of God, stop writing.
Sincerely, Mom
OK, OK, my mom didn't write that letter. She would never
write anything like that, primarily because that would leave
proof lying around. All right, all right, I am kidding again!
She would never write or say anything like that. |
In this issue of FAITH, we look at self-sacrifice
and its importance in our own faith as well as our faith life.
In our Lenten and Easter celebrations, we revel in God's incredible
and unexpected act of suffering and dying for our sins, then rising
from the dead.
We know of the awesome and wonderful power
of our God. This is the same God who created the heavens
and the earth and all that is in them and set it all in place.
The Bible says we are "fearfully and wonderfully made" by
the hand of God. He rules all of time and creation. There is
no questioning His power. Yet what do we celebrate?
God did the unexpected. He
humbled Himself. He took flesh and walked among us. God the Creator
gave His creation power over Himself and we put Him to death. That
act was the ultimate act of self-sacrifice and it is one we must
imitate. This act of self-sacrifice is the one we celebrate each
time we join in the Liturgy.
It is actually quite simple if
we wish to be Christian, we must imitate Christ who sacrificed
so much for us. This imitation of Christ's sacrifice is a challenge
to each of us. It is, at times, a painful and difficult thing.
When we experience that pain, we must always turn again to the
example of Jesus who wept in the Garden of Olives. (Matthew 26:36-46)
Because God became human, He knows our pain. He
knows what it is like to lose a friend to death or fear or even
betrayal. He has been there, done that and offers now to walk with
us when our self-sacrifice leads to suffering. But we also know
it does not end there. Jesus rose from the dead and promises us
that "if we die with (Him), we shall rise with (Him)." In
the words of one of our deacons at St. Gerard, "Can you imagine
how Jesus felt when He came out of the tomb?"
No kidding! That is the way we can feel,
too. When we sacrifice ourselves (what we want or think
we need) and something in us has to die, we can count on the
Lord who is faithful and true to restore us to life.
Why did Jesus have to die?
Well, someone had to. Sounds bad?
It's true! The price of sin entering the world is death. Before
Jesus, believers used to offer animal sacrifices of lambs to God
for their sins. These lambs would have to be without mark or stain
or blemish and they were offered to God as a sacrifice for sins.
Another way to expiate sins before Jesus
was to bring a goat into the center of the community. Each
person would lay their hands on the goat and whisper their sins.
When all were finished, they would send the goat off into the
wilderness to die. (This, by the way, is where we get the term
'scapegoat' from).
Jesus came as the spotless lamb. He
never sinned and he offered Himself up by taking upon Himself the
sins of the whole world through all of time and history. His pure,
sinless blood brought forgiveness for all time and all people.
Let's celebrate the mystery of our faith: "Christ
has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again!"
Enjoy another day in God's presence!
Originally Published: April 2000
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