Hebrews 4:14-5:6; Mark 8:34-9:1
Today we do something
that makes no sense at all apart from the resurrection of our Lord, for we
adore the Cross on which He died. The
Romans executed traitors on crosses in order to make an example of what
happened to people who dared to oppose them.
Death on a cross was a long, painful process in which the victim was
helpless before his tormentors and displayed to the world as a pathetic failure
by every human standard. After having been
betrayed by Judas, denied three times by Peter, and handed over to the pagan
Romans by the corrupt leaders of His own people, the Son of God was nailed to
the Cross and left to die. Had He not risen
in glory on the third day, no one would think of it as anything other than a
horrible means of death.
Through
the Cross, Christ shows us that true life does not come through responding in
kind to our enemies or making the protection of our own interests the highest
good. He demonstrates that true power often
looks like weakness according to the standards of our corrupt world. He calls us to destroy the idols we have
welcomed into our hearts as we join ourselves to His great Self-offering for
our salvation.
In
the remaining weeks of Lent, we must stop being ashamed of the Cross in how we
live. We must save our lives by losing
them in the service of our Lord and those in whom we encounter Him daily. We must crucify the passions and habits of
thought, word, and deed that keep us enslaved to the fear of death. As we prepare to follow Him to His Passion by
prayer, fasting, generosity to the needy, and forgiveness, we must learn to
bear our own crosses, for the only way to life is through dying to the
distorting power of sin in our souls. We
do that through humble repentance every time that we gain the strength to say “no”
to ourselves in order to say “yes” to God.
There is no way around
this uncomfortable truth: To save our
lives, we must lose them. Instead of
being ashamed of the Cross, we must bear witness to the One who offered Himself
fully on it for our salvation by how we live each day. That means to deny ourselves, take up our
crosses, and follow Him as we struggle to die to all that would separate us
from embracing the blessed, eternal life that the Savior has brought to the
world. There is simply no other way to
be a Christian and to prepare ourselves to enter into the holy joy of Pascha.
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