Friday, February 5, 2010
Pope Picks OUR Mirror as 2010 Lenten Theme!
(Did that National-Enquiresque headline grab you?)
Lent begins Feb. 17, and Pope Benedict is inviting us spend some time during Lent to reflect on "the great theme of justice." His message for Lent on that theme is available here. An excerpt:
What then is the justice of Christ? Above all, it is the justice that
comes from grace, where it is not man who makes amends, heals himself
and others. The fact that "expiation" flows from the "blood" of Christ
signifies that it is not man’s sacrifices that free him from the weight
of his faults, but the loving act of God who opens Himself in the
extreme, even to the point of bearing in Himself the "curse" due to man
so as to give in return the "blessing" due to God (cf. Gal 3, 13-14).
But this raises an immediate objection: what kind of justice is this
where the just man dies for the guilty and the guilty receives in
return the blessing due to the just one? Would this not mean that each
one receives the contrary of his "due"? In reality, here we discover
divine justice, which is so profoundly different from its human
counterpart. God has paid for us the price of the exchange in His Son,
a price that is truly exorbitant. Before the justice of the Cross, man
may rebel for this reveals how man is not a self-sufficient being, but
in need of Another in order to realize himself fully. Conversion to
Christ, believing in the Gospel, ultimately means this: to exit the
illusion of self-sufficiency in order to discover and accept one’s own
need – the need of others and God, the need of His forgiveness and His
friendship. So we understand how faith is altogether different from a
natural, good-feeling, obvious fact: humility is required to accept
that I need Another to free me from "what is mine," to give me
gratuitously "what is His." This happens especially in the sacraments
of Reconciliation and the Eucharist. Thanks to Christ’s action, we may
enter into the "greatest" justice, which is that of love (cf. Rm 13,
8-10), the justice that recognises itself in every case more a debtor
than a creditor, because it has received more than could ever have been
expected.
Strengthened by this very experience, the Christian is moved to contribute to creating just societies, where all receive what is necessary to live according to the dignity proper to the human person and where justice is enlivened by love.
Strengthened by this very experience, the Christian is moved to contribute to creating just societies, where all receive what is necessary to live according to the dignity proper to the human person and where justice is enlivened by love.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/02/pope-picks-our-mirror-as-2010-lenten-theme.html