Christ’s
death discloses the utter reliability of God’s love above all in the light of
his resurrection. As the risen one, Christ is the trustworthy witness,
deserving of faith (cf. Rev 1:5; Heb 2:17), and a solid support
for our faith. "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile",
says Saint Paul (1 Cor 15:17). Had the Father’s love not caused Jesus to
rise from the dead, had it not been able to restore his body to life, then it
would not be a completely reliable love, capable of illuminating also the gloom
of death.
When
Saint Paul describes his new life in Christ, he speaks of "faith in the
Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me" (Gal 2:20).
Clearly, this "faith in the Son of God" means Paul’s faith in Jesus,
but it also presumes that Jesus himself is worthy of faith, based not only on
his having loved us even unto death but also on his divine sonship. Precisely
because Jesus is the Son, because he is absolutely grounded in the Father, he
was able to conquer death and make the fullness of life shine forth.
Our
culture has lost its sense of God’s tangible presence and activity in our
world. We think that God is to be found in the beyond, on another level of
reality, far removed from our everyday relationships. But if this were the
case, if God could not act in the world, his love would not be truly powerful,
truly real, and thus not even true, a love capable of delivering the bliss that
it promises. It would make no difference at all whether we believed in him or
not. Christians, on the contrary, profess their faith in God’s tangible and
powerful love which really does act in history and determines its final
destiny: a love that can be encountered, a love fully revealed in Christ’s
passion, death and resurrection.
Lumen Fidei 17
Reflection – ‘Tuesdays with Francis’, now on a new day
for this week only (in all the disruption of travel, I forgot about it
yesterday). I was talking recently to a man of deep faith and prayer who was
lamenting somewhat the religious indifferentism of some of his family and loved
ones, that what for him was the key question of all of life—God, the meaning of
it all, Jesus Christ—was a matter of supreme indifference and irrelevance for
them.
It does seem
to me that this is what Pope Francis (although honestly I hear Pope Benedict’s
typical style loud and clear in this paragraph) is saying here. God is
somewhere else, or on some other level of reality, or not really acting in the
world, or just a big cryptic question mark that cannot possibly be resolved,
encountered, entered into a real relationship with. If I thought that about
God, I too would conclude that the God question is an irrelevant distraction
from the business of life, and just get on with it.
The Christian
faith is that God has come very close to us, has indeed entered right into the
deepest stuff of our life—the questions that do exercise every human being who
has not descended into utter insensibility. Life, death, pain, joy, love,
hatred, family, the past and its successes and failures, the future and its
uncertainty—surely every human being with any degree of interiority is
concerned with these matters.
It is our
belief that God has planted Himself squarely on the ground of His creation
called ‘man’, the place of our humanity and its most urgent and universal
longings, questions, concerns. And it is Jesus Christ, his life, death, and
resurrection, that provide the surest guidance and most beautiful divine
answers to all these riddles that have presented themselves to mankind from the
beginning.
What is becoming
more and more clear to me, though, is that as necessary as a lucid presentation
of our beliefs are, as much as we have to find words to explain to people just
how it is that Jesus and the testimony of the Gospels makes our humanity shine
forth with divine radiance and opens a door in our finite mortal nature to a
sharing in the infinite eternal glory of God, words are not enough for this.
We live in a
world sated with words, bloated on words, and in which words have too often
been reduced to instruments of manipulation and control rather than servants of
truth and wisdom. We need, not only words, but witness.
We need love—Christians
who will not just talk about the faith but practice it with ever growing
generosity and fidelity, who put their skin into the game, who go out from the
parish and their own homes into the streets and alley ways, the town centers
and the obscure outskirts, to make the love of God poured out in Jesus visible
to the world. This is really what Pope Francis is calling all of us to do, or
if we are already doing it, to redouble our efforts, to never say ‘Oh, I’m
doing enough for God’, but to earnestly ask what more we can do.
It seems to me
that the witness of Christian love is the only thing that will move people out
of religious indifferentism and spark a renewed hope that maybe there is a way
to God in the world, a way out of death and futility into hope and joy. I also
believe that the world is heading into truly tough times and, frankly,
Christians are going to need to be ready to love generously and take care of
people’s material and spiritual needs. Are we ready for that? If not, let’s get
praying and earnestly seeking the Lord’s help. And with that… time for this
little Christian to go to community prayers!
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