Sunday, September 14, 2014

God gives all to let the light in – Jn 3:13-17, Phi 3:6-11

Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross; Holy Cross - St. Stan's.

Imagine a boy born in captivity, born in a cellar, trapped.  Imagine this boy has never seen sunlight.  He has only seen his murky world clinically and coldly illumined by artificial, ill-colored electric bulbs.  His mother has told him of sunlight, has told him of how wonderful it feels upon the skin, of how the clouds flow past it leaving their shapes behind, of how it fills a space with warmth and beauty, of how it’s like the lights he’s seen, but so much more, so much better, that with it, he’d be able to see colors as they really are, that he’d be able to distinguish blue from black (which yellow electric light can never allow) and see the beauty.  Slowly, she comes to realize that the blacked out window in the basement is low enough that she could break it.  It’s too small for either of them to be able to get out, but she could break it.  Who knows what her captors would do to her in response to this outrage against their control?  But she has to risk it.  Whatever it would cost, she’d dare to risk it, to let her boy see the sun, to show him that there is an outside, there is a force invisible to him more ancient and more powerful than the walls that confine them, a force able to truly illumine them, that need not be overcome and shut out by walls, a force that could pierce through that window that she would give all if needed to open, and let in the light that would delight, that would warm, that might just excite her son enough to turn to it, and seek the freedom it promised.


Imagine seeing sunlight for the first time.  That’s what the cross does for us.  That’s why we exalt it.  Not because we delight in human suffering, not in Jesus’ suffering anymore than we delight in our fictional mother’s lacerated hands as her fist punches through the blacked out window.  We exalt and delight and marvel and trust and hope in the cross, because it shows us love, and love lights up the world.  The crucifixion brings the glory of God within human experience, like the light which transforms the basement walls, transfiguring sin and death.

But, my image fails a little, as all images will fail before the throne of glorious love that our God offers us.  For the cross won’t burn our eyes as the sun might.  God’s love combines the fieriness of a furnace with a gentle, tender touch.  God’s love invites our gaze, and that gaze draws us forward, to desire the freedom only to be found in love and virtue, and God love draws out our love and casts out our fear. We hear in our first reading that the Israelites had to give up their valuable bronze to make a bronze seraph serpent.  And the serpent was gazed on in order that the serpents that were attacking of them might have no more power.  In the crucifixion, Christ gives what’s of ultimate value, that death may be gazed on, and the death that attacks us might have no more power.  People show their love by what they’re willing to give, and on the cross Christ showed the magnitude of his love for us by giving everything, his clothing, his blood, his body, his life, that we might see love.  Love we were created from and for.  Love we’d heard about.  Love we knew and can know in muted reflection of fiery divine love.  But love we saw in full brilliance in a creator, who’d go to the cross at the hands of his creature, to open that window and not just warm our hearts, but set them aflame.

The death of Life himself brings us life.  And we see in that life the true image of God.  We see the love of God brought into our language, our world.  We see the brilliance of selfless love that refuses to grasp, as St. Paul put it, refuses to exploit the power it has for its own benefit.  And we see in fresh relief the walls that hold us in, the sin and division, the distorted copy of the image of God that imprisons.  Those walls quake when those grasping forces collide with the love of God incarnate, and they disdain love, discard love, kill love.  And then power and brightness of love shines forth as love rises from the dead, trampling over sin and suffering to be with us even more powerfully, ever-lovingly.  And we are invited, to leave the world of grasping, and follow the way of self-emptying, in order to be filled with that divine life, that love.  To reclaim our created loveliness.

And that stark sight of love and sin colliding presented on Calvary hill is re-presented to us.  When we see a crucifix, when we sign our bodies with the cross, when we see suffering, when we see sacrifice represented and offered here in this Eucharist, we see love, which lets itself be pierced by sin that it might pervade every corner of this waiting world and illumine our way, our way home.


Crux ave, spes unica.  Hail the Cross, our Only Hope.

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