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My dear People,
In every Catholic church in the world on Good Friday, the account of the
Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ from the Gospel of St. John will
resound. Along with the other accounts of the Passion, it is a moving
testimony to the final hours of Jesus before His crucifixion.
As all Catholics know who attend Holy Week services, the Gospel is
unusual because it is a choral reading, with different readers taking
the parts of Jesus, the Narrator, and the other figures in the Passion,
while the congregation speaks the part of the crowd. In this way we are
invited into the drama of the event. We are made to relive it. It is as
though we were there ourselves.
Catholic liturgy accomplishes this. We are present to Our Lord Jesus as
He prays in the Garden of Olives, walks the streets of Jerusalem,
appears before Pilate, is scourged and beaten, carries His heavy cross,
and finally speaks those momentous words, "It is finished." What has
Jesus accomplished?
I am particularly struck by the irony of Pilate and what he says. With
Jesus standing before him, Pilate asks the question, "What is truth?"
Pilate asks this in the spirit of the Roman times. He asks it as a cynic
would. In this aspect, our world is not much different from Pilatešs.
The world today is filled with a great deal of cynicism. Many have lost
faith in institutions. They have lost their equanimity. There is anger,
but people do not know what to be angry about. There is dissatisfaction,
but there are few answers. There is great distrust of human nature and
motives. Pilate is indeed a very modern man. What does Jesus have to
offer him? In asking the question, "What is truth?", Pilate has in fact
missed the point. Truth stands before his eyes.
Truth needs no justification. As a matter of fact, truth simply is.
Jesus taught this as well. When Jesus says that He is "the way, the
truth, and the life", He is drawing attention to the fact that truth
does not reside apart from Him. The Father has sent Him. As the Father
is true, Jesus reveals the truth. "I did not come on my own," Jesus
explains, "but the one who sent me, whom you do not know, is true" (John
7:28).
Jesus is willing to die, and in so doing gives testimony to the truth.
He obediently embraces the Fatheršs will for Him. His death on the cross
demonstrates the truth of everything He taught.
It is one thing for a messenger to preach a message. It is quite another
thing for the messenger to be willing to die for it. This is exactly
what Jesus does. The cross testifies to the message and its truth. For
this reason, St. Paul will write, "We proclaim Christ crucified, a
stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but to those who
are called, Jews and Greeks alike, Christ the power of God and the
wisdom of God" (I Corinthians 1:23-24). The cross is the constant
reminder of the truth of what Jesus did and said. As Jesus stood before
Pilate, the cross must stand before the world to witness to the truth.
This truth of the cross must be preached and witnessed to in the lives
of every Christian. Again as St. Paul expresses it, "May I never boast
except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world
has been crucified to me, and I to the world" (Galatians 6:14). To
identify with Christ to this extent is, I think, the goal of every
Christian.
The world simply needs to see witnesses to the Truth. It needs no more
mediocrity. When the Pilates of the world ask, "What is truth?", they
should find an heroic answer in the lives of faithful Christians who
take their faith seriously and seek to follow Godšs commandments. To do
so is to embrace the cross, but that embrace implies a victory.
I extend to you my best wishes and blessings for a joyful Easter. As we
renew our baptismal promises at every Easter Mass, may we renew our
commitment to the Truth. May the sufferings of Jesus be ours, so that
His victory might also be ours.
Devotedly yours in our Risen Lord,
+Glen John Provost
Bishop of Lake Charles |