The Resurrection. This, indeed, is the central mystery of our faith. Jesus, allowing himself to be consumed with passion for righteousness and swallowed by death has, in turn, conquered death once and for all with the power that is the promise of eternal life.
Christ's pathway of passion, death and resurrection was personal: it was unique. It had been fashioned by the Father from all eternity. Jesus was faithful to God's vision for Him. Jesus embraced His vocation as the humble, gentle Messiah. Jesus suffered the pain of death. Jesus experienced the power of rising again.
God has fashioned a personal path for each of us from all eternity. Each of us has a unique role to play in the Father's never-ending revelation of divine life, divine love, divine justice, divine peace and divine reconciliation. Still, the way to resurrection is the way of the cross - the way of giving up, the way of letting go, the way of surrendering any and all things, thoughts, attitudes and actions that prevent us from embodying the passion of Christ: the passion for all that is righteous and true.
Saint Francis de Sales offers this image in Book 9 of his Treatise on the Love of God: “So, too, we must strip ourselves of all affections, little and great, and make a frequent examination of our heart to see if it is truly ready to divest itself of all its garments, as Isaiah did. Then, at the proper time, we must take up again the affections suitable to the service of charity, so that we may die naked on the cross with our divine Savior and afterward rise again with him as new people."
Be certain of one thing: the daily dying to self that is part of living a passionate life is not about dying, stripping and letting go for its own sake. No, it is that all of who we are may be purified to more faithfully and effectively live lives of divine passion and compassion. God does not desire that we die to self out of self-deprecation but that we die to self in order that, paradoxically, we may actually be more of who God calls us to be.
“Love is as strong as death to enable us to forsake all things,” wrote Saint Francis de Sales. “It is as magnificent as the Resurrection to adorn us with glory and honor.”
This glory and honor is not just reserved for Heaven. To the extent that we die a little each day and experience the fidelity of God's love in the midst of all adversity, trials, struggles and “letting go,” we can experience something of the Resurrection every day.
Father Michael Murray, OSFS
Parochial Vicar
St. John Neumann, Reston, VA