Paul had to begin
with the Cross and then retrace his steps backward to Calvary. To him and to
his people, the prophetic connection between suffering and glory were repugnant.
The Jew and the Greek both had a horror of death; to the Greek there was a
physical aversion; to the Jew it was a moral shame. And yet the glorified Christ
began Paul’s conversion with the Cross—at that very point where all national
characteristics were assailed. He had to see Christ repersecuted, recrucified,
renailed. And when he asked who it was who questioned, there flashed the vision,
‘I am Jesus, Whom you are persecuting’ (Acts
26:16)
Fulton Sheen Those
Mysterious Priests 1974: 108
T
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here is something truly wonderful in the fact that one of the foremost
persecutors of the Early Church, Saul of Tarsus, is converted and becomes the
Apostle to the Gentiles. It reminds us of the fact that no-one is beyond God’s
reach, that a second chance , a fresh start, and a new beginning is on offer
for each and everyone who turns to Christ. The Gospel is truly Good News, and
the saving work of God in Christ Jesus, Our Lord and Saviour, is something
which we should both celebrate and share, with everyone whom we meet, at all
times, and in all places.
As a result of his conversion experience
upon the road to Damascus, the man who had clamoured for the stoning of Stephen
now prizes Christ above all else. When he writes to the church in Colossae he
begins by singing the praise of the God who loves him and who saves him.
Christ is the image of the invisible
God, the God whom we cannot see, cannot know, and cannot understand becomes visible
and vulnerable in the person of Christ Jesus – he is born as a baby in
Bethlehem, he needs his parents love and care. He is tempted, but he resists in
order to show us how to live our lives. He preaches the Good News of the
Kingdom, calling humanity to repent for the Kingdom is close at hand, he heals
the sick to show us what God’s love is like in action. But most of all, He
suffers and dies for us – he pays the debt which we cannot. God is Christlike
and in Him is no un-Christlikeness at all – Jesus shows us who and what God is.
He is the invisible made visible, the incomprehensible made comprehensible, the
remote made personal. He is the only-begotten Son of God, begotten not made, consubstantial,
co-eternal, and co-equal divinity. As the Word of God He is the creative force
through which the World was made, God spake and it was done, it is through the
Word of God that all Creation springs into being. All that there is owes its
very existence to God – the God who suffered and died for love of us.
As well as stressing the supreme majesty
of Christ, Paul is at pains to stress how it is that in Christ all things hold
together – this is the cohesive power of God: to unite, to hold together, to
reconcile, to redeem, to love. Christ is the head of the body, the Church. We
are all baptised into Him, into His Death and Resurrection, we are nourished by
Him in Word and Sacrament, we are fed by Him, fed with Him, with His Body and
Blood under the outward forms of Bread and Wine, to share His Divine life, and
to be given a foretaste of Heaven, so that our lives and souls may be
transformed by Him, so that we may grow together in Unity and Love, which is
His Will. He is the beginning and the end of all things, the Alpha and the
Omega, firstborn from the dead so that we might share His risen life. We honour
Him, we honour God, in our praise and worship, and in our lives when we live
out our faith, when we live as God wants us to, so that in all things God might
be pre-eminent – so that God is the most important thing in our life.
For in him all the fullness of God was
pleased to dwell – he is true God and true man: two natures, two wills, united
without change, division, confusion, or separation. ‘Was pleased to dwell’
for such are the loving purposes of God – and the Word became flesh and dwelt
among us, full of grace and truth. This is the heart of our faith, and the Good
News of the Gospel, God became man for our sake. And if we want to know how much
God loves us, we can see in Christ - God loves us this much (extends arms)
the arms of God are flung wide upon the Cross to embrace the world with God’s love
– this is what it takes to reconcile to himself all things on earth or in heaven.
This is the price God pays for love of us – for you and me, each and every one of
us, everyone who has ever lived, or who will ever live. In this God makes peace
by the blood of His Cross, this is true glory, this is how God reigns in majesty,
and shows that He is supreme, and over all things, through dying the death of a
common criminal, through suffering for our sake, and so we can say with St Paul
in his Letter to the Galatians “We should glory in the cross of our Lord
Jesus Christ, for he is our salvation, our life and our resurrection; through
him we are saved and made free." (Galatians 6:14) To him be all glory, now and forever,
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