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Martyrdom Of St. Ignatius by Pier Ghezzi (1674-1755)
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Saint Ignatius was Bishop of Antioch overseeing 1st
century Syrian Christians and was a disciple of the Apostle John. He wrote a
letter to the Christians at Ephesus as he was being transported to Rome to face
wild beasts in the arena. He said, “For our God, Jesus Christ, was conceived by
Mary in accord with God’s plan: of the seed of David, it is true, but also of
the Holy Spirit.” Yes, Christ’s coming was God plan from the beginning of
history with the catastrophe of Adam and Eve’s sin which drove a wedge between
humanity and God.
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Original Sin and Banishment From The Garden Of Eden (c. 1510) by Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) |
Although they were severely punished, we should
note that neither Adam or Eve were cursed by God. (That distinction was
reserved only for the serpent.) God made provision to bring those he created in
his image back to him. This is alluded to in God’s comment to the serpent in
Genesis 3:15: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your
offspring and hers; He will strike at your head, while you strike at his
heel.”
Biblical scholars have often referred to this verse as protoevangelium (the first good news).
God alluded to Christ’s victory over sin. The New American Catholic Study Bible footnote to 3.15 states because
“the Son of God appeared that he might destroy the works of the devil” (1Jn 3.8),
the passage can be understood as the first promise of a redeemer for fallen
mankind. The woman’s offspring then is primarily Jesus Christ.” God’s gracious
promise was Christ to deliver fallen mankind from the power of Satan.
What we are celebrating in Advent is so much more than a joyful,
festive holiday. The joy associated with Christmas is more rightly directed
toward Christ. His coming in the flesh is evidence of God’s immeasurable love
for all humanity.
To quote another early Church Father, Saint Irenaeus (c.
140-202): “If the flesh were not in a
position to be saved, the Word of God would certainly not have become flesh.”
Through the first Adam we offended God (Original Sin) and brought death into
the world, the second Adam (Jesus Christ) overcame death. (see Romans 5,
1Corinthians 15.20-22, 45-49.) In the flesh man fell, in the flesh man was
raised.
From the moment of Christ’s birth in Bethlehem, Golgotha
cast its long, dark shadow over his cradle.
The spiritual wheels were set in motion with the baby’s first cry in the
manger that would change the course of eternal destiny for millions upon millions of people
for 2,000 years, including me.
Christ coming in the flesh meant he knew the aches and pains
of normal life and the suffering of an excruciating death. Because of his life
and death, there is no agony I can experience that Christ cannot sympathize with
from his own experience. His suffering exceeded anything you or I will
experience in this life.
This has been a great comfort to me during more than thirty
years of degenerative neurological disease. Not only does Christ understand my
pain, he has been with me throughout it all. He invites me into his redemptive
suffering.
When my death comes, I trust he will be with me then too. My
eyes will see Christ and His Mother; the Mother of God has so often prayed to her
Son on my behalf and that of my family: ("... Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death.")
And just as Christ was the first fruits of resurrection, I
will also rise in Him at the Resurrection of the body to spend eternity with
Him. My broken and diseased body will be made perfect. Yes, Just as Christ rose
from the grave and is now with God the Father. He will raise me too. What we
will be has not been revealed but Christ promised through the pen of John the
Apostle that we shall be like Christ, and “we will finally see him as he is.”
(1 John 3.2.)
God himself will be forever with those who love his Son. The
Promise that was made in Eden will come to fullness for Christ is the Alpha and
Omega, the beginning and the end. You
see, Christ is the gift of Christmas. He is the hope of mankind. That is the
reason the heavens aligned in the Star of Bethlehem.
It is late and tonight I am sitting in my wheelchair gazing
at the lights on the Christmas tree; embers are glowing in the fireplace; I can
say that all is well; Christ has come and He will come again. The desiring and
the having are melting into one. Like
Job, I know my Redeemer lives.
Mark
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