To God and His Priest
July 30: Feast of St. Peter
Chrysologus
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Christological Anthropology of Vatican II found
in Gaudium et Spes #22 and #24 – the total gift of self [matter and spirit] –
grounded here and marvelously experessed in Peter Chrysologus, father of the
Church (circa 380-450).
2nd Reading from the Office of Readings of the Liturgy of the
Hours for Tuesday of the 4th Week of Easter
From a sermon by Saint Peter Chrysologus, bishop
I appeal to you by the mercy of God. This appeal is made by Paul, or rather, it
is made by God through Paul, because of God's desire to be loved rather than
feared, to be a father rather than a Lord. God appeals to us in his mercy to
avoid having to punish us in his severity.
Listen to the Lord's
appeal: In me, I want you to see your own body, your members, your heart, your
bones, your blood. You may fear what is divine, but why not love what is human?
You may run away from me as the Lord, but why not run to me as your father?
Perhaps you are filled with shame for causing my bitter passion. Do not be
afraid. This cross inflicts a mortal injury, not on me, but on death. These
nails no longer pain me, but only deepen your love for me. I do not cry out
because of these wounds, but through them I draw you into my heart. My body was
stretched on the cross as a symbol, not of how much I suffered, but of my
all-embracing love. I count it no less to shed my blood: it is the price I have
paid for your ransom. Come, then, return to me and learn to know me as your
father, who repays good for evil, love for injury, and boundless charity for
piercing wounds.
Listen now to what the Apostle urges us to do. I
appeal to you, he says, to present your bodies as a living
sacrifice. By this exhortation of his, Paul has raised all men to
priestly status.
How marvelous is the priesthood of the
Christian, for he is both the victim that is offered on his own behalf, and the
priest who makes the offering. He does not need to go beyond himself to seek
what he is to immolate to God: with himself and in himself he brings the
sacrifice he is to offer God for himself. The victim remains and the priest
remains, always one and the same. Immolated, the victim still lives: the priest
who immolates cannot kill. Truly it is an amazing sacrifice in which a body is
offered without being slain and blood is offered without being shed.
The Apostle says: I appeal to you by the
mercy of God to present your bodies as a living sacrifice.Brethren,
this sacrifice follows the pattern of Christ's sacrifice by which he gave his
body as a living immolation for the life of the world. He really made his body
a living sacrifice, because, though slain, he continues to live. In such a
victim death receives its ransom, but the victim remains alive. Death itself
suffers the punishment. This is why death for the martyrs is actually a birth,
and their end a beginning. Their execution is the door to life, and those who
were thought to have been blotted out from the earth shine brilliantly in
heaven.
Paul says: I appeal to you by the mercy
of God to present your bodies as a sacrifice, living and holy.The prophet
said the same thing: Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but you
have prepared a body for me. Each of us is called to be both a
sacrifice to God and his priest. Do not forfeit what divine authority confers
on you. Put on the garment of holiness, gird yourself with the belt of
chastity. Let Christ be your helmet, let the cross on your forehead be your unfailing
protection. Your breastplate should be the knowledge of God that he himself has
given you. Keep burning continually the sweet smelling incense of prayer. Take
up the sword of the Spirit. Let your heart be an altar. Then, with full
confidence in God, present your body for sacrifice. God desires not death, but
faith; God thirsts not for blood, but for self-surrender; God is appeased not
by slaughter, but by the offering of your free will.
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