Good Friday 2017
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Dominic Priory, NOLA
Brothers,
recall for a moment all the small mercies you have enjoyed
through the years. I don't mean the really big stuff like sacramental
absolution from mortal sin, or a last-minute reprieve from a serious
accident or a deadly disease. I mean the truly smallish mercies;
the everyday mercies of living and working with our fellow sinners –
here at the priory, in the parish, at your ministry site, or just
strolling around WalMart! What sort of lives would we lead if we
couldn't give and receive mercy, especially the little mercies we
need just to be up and moving around w/o constantly finding ourselves
in furious arguments or fist-fights?
What
I'm calling small mercies flow unimpeded from the one Big
Mercy we celebrate this afternoon – the death of Christ on the
cross. Over the centuries, the Church has preached a consistent
message about the consequences of his crucifixion – we are freed
from sin and death and made heirs to His Kingdom. But there's one
other element that doesn't get as much attention. Without Christ's
death on the cross, mercy would have no eternal weight, no
transcendental worth. Without his final proof of divine love at
Golgotha, mercy would be mere courtesy, and our struggle would be
with civility not holiness. But b/c he took on sin and healed our
human nature, we are able to see well-beyond the limits of the here
and now and look forward to a time and place where being merciful
is no longer necessary b/c being sinful is no longer an option.
This
Friday is a Good Friday b/c Christ's death on the cross elevates our
human virtues, giving them immeasurable weight and worth. Because his
suffering and death on the cross makes our return to the Father not
only possible but all the more desirable. And because – left to
ourselves – patience, forgiveness, even love would be impossible to
empty of self-regard and self-preservation. Thanks to be God, that
Christ's self-sacrifice on the cross is the still running-engine of
mercy that gives life to the possibility of our conversion and the
reality of our hope in the resurrection. While we commemorate the
bloody cross this afternoon, we keep our hearts and minds clearly and
fiercely focused on a divine horizon – the empty tomb and the
promise of Easter morning.
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