From a sermon by Saint Leo the Great, pope
The Cross of Christ is the source of all blessings, the cause of all graces |
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Our
understanding, which is enlightened by the Spirit of truth, should
receive with purity and freedom of heart the glory of the cross as it
shines in heaven and on earth. It should see with inner vision the
meaning of the Lord’s words when he spoke of the imminence of his
passion: The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. Afterward he said: Now
my soul is troubled, and what am I to say? Father, save me from this
hour. But it was for this that I came to this hour. Father, glorify your
Son. When the voice of the Father came from heaven, saying, I have glorified him, and will glorify him again, Jesus said in reply to those around him: It
was not for me that this voice spoke, but for you. Now is the judgement
of the world, now will the prince of this world be cast out. And I, if I
am lifted up from the earth, will draw all things to myself.
How marvellous the power of the cross; how great
beyond all telling the glory of the passion: here is the judgement-seat
of the Lord, the condemnation of the world, the supremacy of Christ
crucified.
Lord, you drew all things to yourself so that the
devotion of all peoples everywhere might celebrate, in a sacrament made
perfect and visible, what was carried out in the one temple of Judea
under obscure foreshadowings.
Now there is a more distinguished order of Levites, a
greater dignity for the rank of elders, a more sacred anointing for the
priesthood, because your cross is the source of all blessings, the cause
of all graces. Through the cross the faithful receive strength from
weakness, glory from dishonor, life from death.
The different sacrifices of animals are no more: the
one offering of your body and blood is the fulfillment of all the
different sacrificial offerings, for you are the true Lamb of God: you take away the sins of the world.
In yourself you bring to perfection all mysteries, so that, as there is
one sacrifice in place of all other sacrificial offerings, there is
also one kingdom gathered from all peoples.
Dearly beloved, let us then acknowledge what Saint Paul, the teacher of the nations, acknowledged so exultantly: This is a saying worthy of trust, worthy of complete acceptance: Christ Jesus came into this world to save sinners.
God’s compassion for us is all the more wonderful
because Christ died, not for the righteous or the holy but for the
wicked and the sinful, and, though the divine nature could not be
touched by the sting of death, he took to himself, through his birth as
one of us, something he could offer on our behalf.
The power of his death once confronted our death. In the words of Hosea the prophet: Death, I shall be your death; grave, I shall swallow you up.
By dying he submitted to the laws of the underworld; by rising again he
destroyed them. He did away with the everlasting character of death so
as to make death a thing of time, not of eternity. As all die in Adam, so all will be brought to life in Christ.
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