No-one can fail to see
the reality of human sin: all we need to do is to turn on the television or the
radio or open a newspaper and see just what terrible things human beings can do
to each other and themselves.
As part of the his proclamation of the Kingdom, Jesus has to
tell his disciples what will happen – he will be taken and accused, tortured
and mistreated, and killed, but also rise again so that we may know that death
is not the end, that our earthly life is not all that there is. It should come
as no surprise that faced with this the apostle Peter cannot take it in – he does
not want it to happen. It’s a human response – we do not want such a thing to
take place, it’s horrible, it appals us. As Jesus says to Peter, ‘You are
setting your mind on human things not divine things’. The Cross is inevitable
for the simple reason that God loves us that much.
As Christians, those who follow Christ, we are to take up our
Cross and follow him. In the Letter to the Romans, St Paul describes what love
looks like in action – it is how we put our faith, what we believe, into practice
in our lives – by living out the love and forgiveness which we have received,
turning from the ways of the world but rather following the way of God.
We should be under no illusion; it isn’t easy following the
way of the Cross. We cannot do it on our own, we have to do it together, as a
community, relying upon God – loving and forgiving each other. All the power,
all the wealth in the world is worth nothing compared to finding true life in
Christ. These worldly things cannot save us, they cannot give us eternal life,
they cannot deal with human sin – only Jesus can do this. Only in Christ can we
have life and life in its fullness. Only if we lose our life by following him,
can we find what our human life can be.
Thus, the church in following Jesus, offers a radical
alternative to the ways of selfishness and sin, a radical alternative which has
the power to change the world through being conformed to Christ. We can do this
together, by living out our faith and encouraging others to do so, living out
an example of radical love which is difficult and costly and wonderful.
We do it through prayer, through our conversation with God,
listening to God, we are nourished by the Word of God, the Bible, to know that
God loves us, and how are to live out that love and forgiveness in our lives.
We are nourished by the sacraments of the Church, by Holy Communion, so that
the love which God shows to the world on the Cross can continue to be poured
out upon us, so that we can be strengthened to live out the life of faith. It
is food for our souls, so that we may be built up in love. Let us come to him,
to be fed by him, fed with him, to have new life in him, so that he can
continue to transform our human nature and conform us to his example. Let us
take our Cross, as people ransomed, healed, restored and forgiven by the love
of God on the Cross.
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