From a discourse by Saint Anastasius of Antioch
It was necessary that Christ should suffer and so enter into his glory |
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Christ,
who has shown by his words and actions that he was truly God and Lord
of the universe, said to his disciples as he was about to go up to
Jerusalem: We are going up to Jerusalem now, and the Son of Man will
be handed over to the Gentiles and the chief priests and scribes to be
scourged and mocked and crucified.
These words bore out the predictions of the prophets,
who had foretold the death he was to die in Jerusalem. From the
beginning holy Scripture had foretold Christ’s death, the sufferings
that would precede it, and what would happen to his body afterwards.
Scripture also affirmed that these things were going to happen to the
God who is immortal and incapable of suffering.
How could he have been God? We can learn this by
reflecting on the true nature of the Incarnation and finding there the
reason why we can believe truly and rightly in both his passion and his
impassibility: both that he suffered and that it was not in his nature
to suffer – the reason, in other words, why the Word of God, otherwise
impassible, came to his passion. In fact, man could have been saved in
no other way, as Christ alone knew, and those to whom he revealed it;
for he knows all the secrets of the Father, even as the Spirit penetrates the depths of all mysteries.
It was necessary for Christ to suffer: it was
impossible for his passion not to have happened. He said so himself when
he called his companions dull and slow to believe because they failed
to recognize that he had to suffer and so enter into his glory. Leaving
behind him the glory that had been his with the Father before the world
was made, he had gone forth to save his people. This salvation, however,
could be achieved only by the suffering of the author of our life, as
Paul taught when he said that the author of life himself was made perfect through suffering.
Because of us he was deprived of his glory for a little while, the
glory that was his as the Father’s only-begotten Son, but through the
cross this glory is seen to have been restored to him in a certain way
in the body that he had assumed. Explaining what water the Saviour
referred to when he said: He that has faith in me shall have rivers of living water flowing from within him, John says in his gospel that he
was speaking of the Holy Spirit which those who believed in him were to
receive, for the Spirit had not yet been given because Jesus had not
yet been glorified. The glorification he meant was his death upon
the cross for which the Lord prayed to the Father before undergoing his
passion, asking his Father to give him the glory that he had in his
presence before the world began.
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