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“In
This God Shows His Love for Us…”
April 1, 2007
Readings
for Palm Sunday of the Lord's Passion
| Reading
1: Is. 50:4–7 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 22:8–9, 17–18, 19–20, 23–24 |
| Reading
2: Phil. 2:6–11 |
| Gospel:
Lk. 22:14–23:56 or 23:1–49 |
| Link
to Readings |
By Father Frank Pavone
We come
today to the start of a week that brings us to the center
and climax of the entire liturgical year and the very heart
of the Gospel in which we believe: Christ has died, Christ
is risen, Christ will come again.
We have
been preparing for all of Lent to celebrate the events of
these days—events that are so crucial to human history
and to our own lives that they require a whole season of repentance
and preparation to celebrate them worthily. We are blessed
and privileged to be able to say that we believe that through
the events related in the Passion narrative, God has revealed
His love for us; He has opened the way for the forgiveness
of all our sins; and He has placed in our hands the gift of
eternal life.
1.
God has revealed His love for us. St. Paul tells
the Romans that God demonstrated His love for us precisely
in that Christ laid down His life for us sinners. By His decision
to go to Jerusalem, He decides at the same time to give His
life for us. Jesus knew exactly what was going to happen to
Him and consented to it fully.
His entry
into the city is triumphant. The acclaim that greeted Him
is in stark contrast to the shouts of the crowd on Friday
saying, “Crucify him!” At the same time, the triumph
of Palm Sunday represents the fact that by coming to Jerusalem,
Jesus is in fact bringing about the triumph of grace over
sin and life over death. His being lifted up on the Cross
is in fact a lifting up in glory. What we see there is not
weakness, but strength—the strength to give one’s
life for others who need to be saved. What we see there is
the triumphant victory of obedience over rebellion. Christ
is obedient to the Father, even to death, to undo our disobedience
that led to death.
We can
say that those who acclaimed Christ as He entered Jerusalem
didn’t realize how right they were. There was more to
celebrate than met the eye or that could meet their minds.
Love was about to be revealed in a way that would change human
history and usher in the Kingdom of salvation.
At the
beginning of Christianity, some claimed wrongly that Jesus
did not really suffer in His Passion, but only appeared to
suffer. The Church teaches, however, that “He suffered,
died, and was buried.” This is an article of faith.
His suffering and death were real—and that makes His
love all the more clear.
2.
God has opened the way for the forgiveness of our sins.
What came upon the shoulders of Jesus when the Cross was laid
upon Him? What came upon His head when the crown of thorns
was placed upon Him? What came upon His body when the lashes
were carried out against Him? Our sins came upon Him. As a
Holy Week hymn says,
“Who
was the guilty?
Who brought this upon Thee?
Alas, my treason,
Jesus, has undone Thee.
I am the guilty.
I it was denied Thee.
I crucified Thee.”
This is
the day, and this is the Mass, in which we all reaffirm, with
utter conviction and profound gratitude, that the forgiveness
of our sins flows from the blood of Christ’s Cross,
and that we are to run to the Cross yet again as the only
place from which we can find forgiveness.
3.
The events of this day bring eternal life to the world.
God is in the business of destroying death. He submits to
it and then robs it of power through His Resurrection. Our
entire faith is centered on these events. All the sacraments
and all our prayers derive their effectiveness from these
events. Every teaching of the Church and all the preaching
throughout the world is for the purpose of announcing these
events. The whole purpose of the Church and all its ministries
is to apply the fruits of these events to every human being
and to society itself.
God destroys
death, and He continues to do so through us. The events related
this day make us the People of Life. They renew our conviction
that God cares about human life and that we must as well.
In the light of the Passion and death of Christ, which is
the Passion and death of God Himself, no human being can be
indifferent to violence. In the light of what Christ did to
rescue us from death, we realize our call to rescue others
from death. This rescue starts with the most vulnerable human
beings in our midst, the children still living within their
mothers’ wombs, and deprived of the right to life by
abortion.
Some are
tempted to take life rather than sacrifice themselves to protect
and nurture it. Yet when we see what God has done for us,
we find that the very meaning of life is to give ourselves
for the good of the other. In the light of Palm Sunday, it
makes no sense to hold back on our love, or our sacrifice
on behalf of human life.
And it
is that simple truth that the palm branches we carry home
today are meant to remind us of throughout the year. Let us
run to the Cross of Christ, thanking Him for the eternal life
He brings, and resolving to be the People of Life in the world.
Father
Frank Pavone is the national director for Priests
for Life and a member of CUF's advisory council. He is
a contrubutor to Lay Witness magazine.
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