Homily for 23 March 2014: 3rd Sunday of Great Lent
(Hebrews 4:14-5:6)
(Mark 8:34-9:1)
When we have finished the 40 days of
Great Lent, at the end of Great and Holy Week, we look upon the Cross as the
terrible instrument of the Lord’s suffering and death. We see Him nailed and set up on the Cross
like a common thief. We take down His
precious and wounded Body and lay Him with tears and flowers in the tomb, and
we erect the empty Cross as a sign of our grief, but also as a sign that the
tomb will soon be empty, Christ will be risen from the dead, our grief will
turn to joy, and defeat will turn into victory.
Today we are half-way through the 40
days; half-way to the tragedy of the Crucifixion; half-way to the triumph of
the Resurrection. And today also we
focus on the Cross. It stands in the
middle of Great Lent like a shady tree in the middle of the desert; like the
Tree of Life in the middle of the Garden of Paradise.
In the Gospel reading for today, Jesus
tells us that if we want to be His followers, we must deny ourselves, take up
our cross, and follow Him. This reminds
us that we have choices on life’s journey, but only one choice will lead us
after our Lord, God, and Savior Jesus Christ through death to everlasting life.
We can choose not to take up our cross and follow Jesus. We can choose not to deny ourselves—in other words, we can choose to live for
pleasure, or money, or power, or food, or drugs, or work, or whatever we
want. But that choice will not make us
followers of Christ.
We can become followers of Christ only if
we choose, as Christ chose, to take up our cross. For us, the Holy Cross is like a staff or
walking stick that we use to support ourselves on our journey through life. It is strong enough for us because it has
already carried Jesus our Savior. It
will not fail to bring us back to Paradise.
At first, today’s reading from St Paul’s
Letter to the Hebrews might not seem to be about the Holy Cross, but when we
read it carefully and understand how St Paul talks of Jesus’ sacrifice as High
Priest, we realize that Jesus’ sacrifice for the sins of the people was His
death on the Holy Cross.
St Paul shows us that every high priest
chosen from among the people made sacrifices for the people and for himself—but Jesus, since He was God
as well as Man, made a sacrifice of
Himself, not of a lamb or other animal.
He was the perfect sacrifice, so no more blood sacrifices have to be
made.
But because Jesus is human as well as
divine, He understands how we feel. He
knows our self-doubt and our self-contempt because we sin. He knows we need a way to sacrifice something
for our sins so that we can come closer to Him.
So He gives us His Cross to carry, so that we can share His sacrifice
and follow Him to death and resurrection.
For us, then, the Holy Cross is a gift,
not a burden. It is a help, not an
obstacle. It is the way, not the
destination. It is not the end—it is the
beginning of eternal life with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, One
God, now and ever and unto ages of ages.
Amen.
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