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It’s
to Die For
by
Regis J. Flaherty
I normally
hold the door for my wife even though she usually does not
need me to do so. Some consider my action quaint and old-fashioned,
but I do it for good reasons. I hold the door because I want
to express love for my wife and I want to learn how to die.
Love and
death are intimately connected. When I professed my wedding
vows, I gave my life irrevocably to my wife. I told her, as
all couples do in the sacrament of marriage, that I was giving
my life so completely that I was ready to die for her.
I haven’t
yet had to take a bullet for my wife, nor have I been struck
by a car as I pushed her away from an oncoming vehicle. Nevertheless,
my love for my wife has involved dying. I have had to forego
what I wanted at times—I had to die to self—because
covenant love demanded it. And my wife has often had to die
to herself for me—and has done so with much more grace!
A love
that lives and willingly dies for the other is covenant love—the
full giving of self to the other. Covenant love says more
than “I would die for my wife if the right
opportunity comes along.” Covenant love says, “I
will die for her.”
In
Covenant with God
The covenant
with my wife is not the only one into which I have entered.
In Baptism I entered a covenant with God. In Confirmation
I reaffirmed this covenant. This covenant, too, is based on
love, and it, too, requires death. But my covenant with God
has been far more one-sided. After all, Jesus died for me
while I was yet a sinner (see Rom. 5:7–8). Even though
God has given so much and I so little, it remains a covenant
with all that entails. Love still makes demands. The willingness
to die is part of the relationship. After all, God is my covenant
partner, the divine Bridegroom.
On the
Cross at Calvary, Jesus died for His Bride, the Church. In
dying for the Church, He died for each of us. And Calvary
was no isolated incident. Jesus’ earthly life was a
continuing “yes” to love and to the death it entailed.
Jesus’
very incarnation was a dying. “Though he was in the
form of God, [he] did not count equality with God a thing
to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant,
being born in the likeness of men. And . . . he humbled himself
and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross”
(Phil. 2:6–8).
And He
died at Gethsemane as surely as He died at Golgotha. At the
former, He told His Father, “Abba, Father . . . Remove
this cup from me; yet not what I will, but what thou wilt”
(Mk. 14:36, emphasis added). He consummated the death of Gethsemane
at Golgotha when He said, “‘It is finished’;
and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit” (Jn. 19:30).
Our
Response
Baptism
is a covenant sacrament. Through it, God puts His seal on
us (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, nos. 1272–74).
We are brought into His family and made citizens of His Kingdom.
In the baptismal waters, we make our covenant plunge into
the life and death of Christ.
Jesus’
salvific death is not so much a moment in time as it is all
of time captured in a moment. Christ’s sacrifice still
speaks for us in heaven and at every Mass. That timeless death
on the Cross is covenant love offered for each of us every
moment of every day, and it invites you and me to respond.
In the
covenant of love in marriage, my wife and I seek to lay down
our lives for each other. In the New Covenant, Christ has
laid down His life for each of us. Shall we not do the same?
Is it not what love demands?
Martyrdom
is the fullest expression of love that we can possibly show
for God. I don’t know about you, but I’m not 100
percent sure that I’m ready for that demand of love.
I need more practice.
In this
way, Lent makes great sense. It’s a call and an opportunity
to practice covenant love. As holding the door for my wife
both expresses my love and trains me in loving, so the penitential
practices of Lent express my love and get me ready for the
bigger tests of life and love. Little deaths make me ready
for bigger ones. In the spiritual life these “little
deaths” are known as mortification—in
the Latin, literally to “make death” or “put
to death.”
Mortification
enriches my love and increases my freedom, helping me to choose
the good and not be controlled by my appetites and passions.
By it I say “no” to sin and “yes”
to God. My flesh wants comfort, and that is not always evil.
But my will is to be set on God. I want not only to avoid
sin, but also to grow in love. So I die to self in little
ways: fasting, morning prayer (even when I want a little more
sleep), studying God’s Word instead of watching the
latest episode of a reality show, getting to Mass more often
and participating with greater attention and devotion. The
possibilities are only bound by the desire and depth of my
love. This is the daily living of covenant love. Surely it’s
is a small response in relation to all God has done for me,
but it is a response I can make to the demands of love, and
Our Lord receives it as such.
Offer
It Up
There
is another phrase that we Catholics use when we speak of mortification
and little sacrifices. We “offer it up.” It’s
a good little phrase that is rich in covenant meaning. The
covenant of the Old Testament required regular offerings to
God. The Israelites sacrificed lambs, rams, goats, and birds
in sin offerings, burnt offerings, thanksgiving offerings,
and other sacrificial offerings. Do you remember the story
in the second chapter of Luke that we know as the Presentation?
Mary and Joseph came “to offer a sacrifice according
to what is said in the law of the Lord, ‘a pair of turtledoves,
or two young pigeons’” (Lk. 2:24) These offerings
and sacrifices were the response of the People of God’s
to the God who had called, protected, and loved them.
In the
New Covenant, Jesus became the offering. Instead of the blood
of sheep and goats, the very blood of the God-man was shed.
The sacrifice and offerings of the Old Testament became unnecessary,
for the sacrifice that they foreshadowed had been offered
by Christ. As the Book of Hebrews tells us, “[Christ]
has no need . . . to offer sacrifices daily . . . he did this
once for all when he offered up himself” (Heb. 7:27).
But this
ultimate sacrifice is not the end but really the beginning.
Christ brings us into covenant with His Father. With and through
Christ we continue to live the demands of the covenant. “Through
him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise
to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name.
Do not neglect to do good and to share what you have, for
such sacrifices are pleasing to God” (Heb. 13:15–16).
To find
something to offer, we don’t need to look for the truly
difficult. The “hair shirt” and other intense
mortifications of medieval monks are not necessary. The difficulties
and struggles of daily life provide ample matter for little
sacrifices that we can willingly bear and offer to God. Smiling
at that unpleasant clerk, patiently waiting in that long line,
willingly answering the eighth request from one of the children,
joyfully going about our duties—all these daily inconveniences
can be “offered up” to God’s glory for the
well-being of our family and friends and for our sanctification.
This is particularly true when we prayerfully join our small
sacrifices to that ultimate sacrifice of Calvary. This “offering
up” is effective, just as our prayers are effective,
and provides a channel of grace for us and for those for whom
we pray.
Is
This Morbid?
Some of
our friends and associates may ask: “Isn’t this
mortification thing just a little too morbid? Isn’t
this focus on dying depressing?” Love says “no!”
Mortification involves acts, attitudes, signs, and decisions
all made for love. And they lead us to union with the One
we love.
Christ’s
mortification on the Cross led to the Resurrection. When we
freely embrace the crosses in our lives and join them to Christ,
we can hope to share also in His Resurrection. What an honor
to join our sacrifices, small as they are, to those of Christ,
and what a joy it is to know that as we do so—as we
die in those small ways—we draw near to Him in His Resurrection.
Life
Giving
Fasting,
abstinence, and other little sacrifices we make, especially
during Lent, may seem very quaint and old-fashioned to some
people. But we know otherwise. We know that they are opportunities
to love God, and die to sin and self.
Spiritual
writers tell us that mortification and self-denial promote
greater self-mastery and train us for spiritual battle. Indeed,
the way to perfection for a Christian always “passes
by way of the Cross” (Catechism, no. 2015)—both
His and ours. The ashes that we receive to begin Lent remind
us of the shortness of this life and the need for ongoing
repentance and conversion.
But mortification—dying
to self and living for Christ—is also a joyful way to
perfection. This way of the Cross is sweet. How sad it would
be if we had no way to love Our Lord! When a slave denies
himself for his master, there is no merit. That is simply
what a slave must do.
We, however,
are not slaves. Jesus calls His disciples friends (Jn. 15:14).
A friend can show real love. A friend can inconvenience
himself for your benefit. A friend can give up something that
she likes and instead give it to you. A friend can choose
what you prefer instead of what he prefers. And it’s
a joy to be able to do so! It cements and deepens the relationship,
as well.
When
we do His will, we are Christ’s friends, and when we
do those small acts of self-denial and practice mortification
in thought, word, or deed for Him, we express real love. Those
penitential practices of Lent cement and deepen our relationship
with God.
Yet sometimes
we fail as disciples. We struggle with our sins and failings.
But there is a relationship that is at the very foundation
of who we are as Christians. Baptism has made us children
of God.
My refrigerator
is full of pictures that the grandchildren have done. And
what joy and excitement they have when they give them to me.
By these pictures they express their love. I’ve watched
many a child concentrate intently to keep inside the lines,
the crayon clutched in chubby fingers and the tongue slightly
sticking out. A child’s ability is limited, and what
he can give is small, yet I find the offering to be the greatest
of treasures.
God does
not need our acts of self-denial. If we give up sweets, it
fills no need of His. When we struggle to stay awake and pray,
it does not increase His glory. All our mortifications are
far less than even a child’s drawing.
Yet in
another and very real sense, when we live Lent, when we die
to self, when we make sacrifices and practice mortification,
we are responding to the demands of love and bring pleasure
to our heavenly Father. We are living our covenant commitment,
which will continue eternally when we see God in His glory.
And that, my friend, is something to die for!
Regis
J. Flaherty is editor-in-chief of Emmaus Road Publishing.
He has written numerous books and articles, including Last
Things First (about the four last things) and The
How-To Book of Catholic Devotions (co-authored with Mike
Aquilina).
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