From the Jerusalem Catecheses |
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Baptism is a symbol of Christ's passion |
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You
were led down to the font of holy baptism just as Christ was taken down
from the cross and placed in the tomb which is before your eyes. Each
of you was asked, “Do you believe in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit?” You made the profession of faith that
brings salvation, you were plunged into the water, and three times you
rose again. This symbolised the three days Christ spent in the tomb.
As our Saviour spent three days and three nights in
the depths of the earth, so your first rising from the water represented
the first day and your first immersion represented the first night. At
night a man cannot see, but in the day he walks in the light. So when
you were immersed in the water it was like night for you and you could
not see, but when you rose again it was like coming into broad daylight.
In the same instant you died and were born again; the saving water was
both your tomb and your mother.
Solomon’s phrase in another context is very apposite here. He spoke of a time to give birth, and a time to die.
For you, however, it was the reverse: a time to die, and a time to be
born, although in fact both events took place at the same time and your
birth was simultaneous with your death.
This is something amazing and unheard of! It was not
we who actually died, were buried and rose again. We only did these
things symbolically, but we have been saved in actual fact. It is Christ
who was crucified, who was buried and who rose again, and all this has
been attributed to us. We share in his sufferings symbolically and gain
salvation in reality. What boundless love for men! Christ’s undefiled
hands were pierced by the nails; he suffered the pain. I experience no
pain, no anguish, yet by the share that I have in his sufferings he
freely grants me salvation.
Let no one imagine that baptism consists only in the
forgiveness of sins and in the grace of adoption. Our baptism is not
like the baptism of John, which conferred only the forgiveness of sins.
We know perfectly well that baptism, besides washing away our sins and
bringing us the gift of the Holy Spirit, is a symbol of the sufferings
of Christ. This is why Paul exclaims: Do you not know that when we
were baptized into Christ Jesus we were, by that very action, sharing in
his death? By baptism we went with him into the tomb.
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