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Last Updated: Tuesday - 07/13/2010Week of March 11, 2002The cross shows the high cost of loveBy FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi
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We want to be saints, but we dont want to miss out on any sensation that sinners experience. |
What Jesus suffered on the cross and what he suffered just prior in the Garden of Gethsemane is not something that is too much in the realm of divine mystery to be understood. It's something we are asked to imitate.
What Jesus' suffering on the cross reveals, among other things, is that real love costs and costs dearly. If we want sustained, faithful, life-giving love in our lives, the kind of pain that Jesus suffered on the cross is, at a point, its price-tag.
"Love is a harsh thing," Fyodor Dostoevsky once said, costing "not less than everything," T.S. Eliot adds.
That's one of the messages of the cross. Simply put, the cross says: "If you want real love beyond romantic daydreams, if you want to keep any commitment you have ever made in marriage, parenting, friendship or religious vocation, you can do so only if you are willing to sweat blood and die to yourself at times. There is no other route. Love costs. What you see when you look at the cross of Jesus is what committed love asks of us."
This is not something our culture is keen to hear. Today we have many strengths, but sweating blood and dying to self in order to remain faithful within our commitments is not something at which we are very good.
Like Parson's bungling hero, we are sincere, likeable and moral. We want the right things, but every choice is a renunciation and we would love to have what we have without excluding some other things.
We want to be saints, but we don't want to miss out on any sensation that sinners experience.
We want fidelity in our marriages, but we want to flirt with every attractive person who comes round; we want to be good parents, but we don't want to make the sacrifice this demands, especially in terms of our careers; we want deep roots, but we don't want to forego the intoxication that comes with new stimulus.
In short, we want love, but not at the cost of "obedience unto death."
And yet that is the message of the cross. Love costs, costs everything. To love beyond daydreams means to "sweat blood" and "to be obedient unto death" The cross invites us to look at the choices we made in love, see how they narrow our options, and, in that pain, say: "Not my will, but yours, be done."
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