A chosen race, a royal priesthood |
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Saint George, Martyr |
You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood.
This praise was given long ago by Moses to the ancient people of God,
and now the apostle Peter rightly gives it to the Gentiles, since they
have come to believe in Christ who, as the cornerstone, has brought the
nations together in the salvation that belonged to Israel.
Peter calls them a chosen race because of their
faith, to distinguish them from those who by refusing to accept the
living stone have themselves been rejected. They are a royal priesthood
because they are united to the body of Christ, the supreme king and
true priest. As sovereign he grants them his kingdom, and as high priest
he washes away their sins by the offering of his blood. Peter says they
are a royal priesthood; they must always remember to hope for an everlasting kingdom and to offer to God the sacrifice of a blameless life.
They are also called a consecrated nation, a people claimed by God as his own, in accordance with the apostle Paul’s explanation of the prophet’s teaching: My righteous man lives by faith; but if he draws back, I will take no pleasure in him. But we, he says, are not the sort of people who draw back and are lost; we are those who remain faithful until we are saved. In the Acts of the Apostles we read: The Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the Church of God which he bought with his own blood. Thus, through the blood of our Redeemer, we have become a people claimed by God as his own, as in ancient times the people of Israel were ransomed from Egypt by the blood of a lamb.
In the next verse, Peter also makes a veiled allusion
to the ancient story, and explains that this story is to be spiritually
fulfilled by the new people of God, so that, he says, they may declare his wonderful deeds.
Those who were freed by Moses from slavery in Egypt sang a song of
triumph to the Lord after they had crossed the Red Sea and Pharaoh’s
army had been overwhelmed; in the same way, now that our sins have been
washed away in baptism, we too should express fitting gratitude for the
gifts of heaven. The Egyptians who oppressed the people of God, and who
can also stand for darkness or trials, are an apt symbol of the sins
that once oppressed us but have now been destroyed in baptism.
The deliverance of the children of Israel and their
journey to the long-promised land correspond with the mystery of our
redemption: we are making our way toward the light of our heavenly home
with the grace of Christ leading us and showing us the way. The light of
his grace was also symbolized by the cloud and the pillar of fire,
which protected the Israelites from darkness throughout their journey,
and brought them by a wonderful path to their promised homeland.
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