Twelfth Sunday in
Ordinary Time Year C
Uniquely found in the Gospel of St Luke, is the context provided for St
Peter’s confession. The exchange arises from Jesus’ prayer time. Several times
in the Gospel we find Jesus praying in solitude: before being tempted in the
desert, when He elected the Twelve, at Gethsemane. It is as if St Luke provides
us with the bread crumbs to locate Jesus. Where can you find the Lord, except
in prayer? Only the experience of silence and prayer offers the proper setting
for the growth and development of a true, faithful and consistent knowledge of
that mystery. After this experience of prayer Jesus asks a critical question:
“Who do you say that I am?” Jesus’ question tries to teach them how their
faith, to be true, must be separated from the views of the world. Pope Benedict
XVI explains that, “there are two ways of “seeing” and “knowing” Jesus: one –
that of the crowd – is more superficial; the other – that of the disciples –
more penetrating and genuine. The disciples were invited to move beyond the
perceptions of the crowds. But this was not enough. They were now challenged to
move beyond their own personal confessions.
In the Synoptic Gospels Peter’s confession is always followed by Jesus’
announcement of his imminent Passion. The passion predictions are not meant to
be stand alone. To understand Jesus’ true identity, to understand the role,
identity and mission of a disciple who is called to be a follower of Jesus, one
needs to understand and assume the challenges that came with the Passion. Indeed,
the titles attributed to him by Peter – you are “the Christ”, “the Christ of
God”, “the Son of the living God” – can only be properly understood in light of
the mystery of his death and Resurrection.
And the opposite is also true: the event of the Cross reveals its full
meaning only if this man who suffered and died on the Cross is truly “the
Christ of God.” If the identity of “Christ” can never be separated from his
passion, then the identity of a Christian can never be separated from the
cross.
Luke’s gospel adds a certain intensity to the
demand of discipleship expected of those who wish to follow Christ. The
disciple is not only expected to take up his cross once in his lifetime, but
the cross is to be taken up ‘daily.’ The cross is thus lived in the every-day
of on-going history. For a disciple of Christ to take up his cross is for him to be willing to start on a death march. To be a
disciple of Jesus Christ is to be willing, in His service, to suffer the
indignities, the pain, and even the death of a condemned criminal.
I’ve heard people describe our crosses as burdens we have to bear in
our lives—the chronically ill relative, the alcoholic or unfaithful husband,
the demanding boss, a short temper, recurring health problems. So taking up
your cross means putting up with these things, enduring them and soldiering on.
We basically have no choice in the matter. With self-pitying pride, they say, “That’s my
cross I have to carry.” Such an interpretation is not what Jesus meant. The
cross was never meant to be a mere accident, an unwanted burden. Grudging
reluctance to bear the cross daily can only lead to resentment – to see life as
a curse, rather than a blessing even in the midst of our daily crosses. What
made the cross salvific was precisely the freedom and deliberateness by which
Christ chose to embrace and die on it.
Commitment to Christ means taking up your cross
daily, giving up your hopes, dreams, possessions, even your very life if need
be for the cause of Christ. And this must be done with utmost freedom and love,
rather than to assume that it is an unfortunate lot that has fallen upon us,
one which we cannot avoid. The cross becomes our salvation only because we can
choose to accept it and deny it. Thus discipleship becomes an act of freedom,
of choosing to lose everything for the sake of the kingdom. For those who
freely choose the cross, it is no longer a symbol of misfortune, a curse or an
unwanted burden. The beauty of the cross only becomes apparent when we embrace
it for love of Christ. Thus, we can echo the words of that medieval mystic, Thomas à Kempis, when he unabashedly confessed that “in the
Cross is salvation; in the Cross is life; in the Cross is protection against
our enemies; in the Cross is infusion of heavenly sweetness; in the Cross is
strength of mind; in the Cross is joy of spirit; in the Cross is excellence of
virtue; in the Cross is perfection of holiness. There is no salvation of soul,
nor hope of eternal life, save in the Cross.”
It is only in recognising the necessity of the
cross in our Christian lives,that we can choose to resist the temptation of
fleeing from it. Our two Popes have given us a potent reminder of the pervasive
necessity of the cross. In his last address to an emotional crowd, Pope
Emeritus Benedict reminded the Church that his resignation did not mean coming
down from the cross. He must have been prophetic as proof of this is found in
his continuing crucifixion by critics of the Church and pseudo-fans of Pope
Francis. The latter extol the simplicity of the new Pope at the cost of
tarnishing the character of the old one. They equate the Pope Emeritus with
their own poor notion of the Middle Ages—dark, backward and decadent—and speak
as if the saintliness of the new Pontiff is an anomaly among the Successors of
Saint Peter. Pope Emeritus Benedict continues to bear the cross, not just as a
misunderstood figure, a victim of a relentlessly aggressive media, but he
chooses to bear the cross for the whole Church. His decision to live a monastic
life of prayer within the confines of the Vatican, hidden from the world, is
his free and deliberate decision to bear his cross for the Church and the
World. It is a sign of courage, not a sign of cowardice; it is an act
proclaiming the victory of cross, rather than resigning oneself to defeat.
It is indeed providential, that as one Pope concluded his pontificate
with reference to the cross, a new Pontiff would begin his reign by speaking of
the necessity of same object. The path of the Church always entails difficulties,
Pope Francis said in his first homily after his election to the pontificate,
and Church leaders should be prepared to embrace them. He explained that “when
we walk without the Cross, when we build without the Cross, when we profess a
Christ without the Cross… we aren't disciples of the Lord.” The Pontiff
therefore reminds us once again, that without the cross “we are worldly. We are
bishops, priests, cardinals, popes, (and I would add lay and religious) but not
disciples of the Lord.”
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