Jesus and the Cross

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he beginning of Holy Week and the anticipation of Easter are a time to reflect on our Lord’s passion, suffering, and death on the cross. There are people who identify themselves as Christian but do not believe in the divinity of Christ. Some say he has a divine nature, but it is not, as Catholics describe it, consubstantial with the Father. As such, they do not believe in a Triune God (one God in three divine persons). This, of course, is a heresy. And it is actually an old heresy, going back to the early Church, and has reappeared throughout history in various forms.

Somewhat surprisingly, there are many who call themselves Christian who do not believe in the divinity of the Holy Spirit. If this is true, then how can the Spirit keep them in the truth as Jesus promised? At the Last Supper, Jesus told the Apostles he will send the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete, the Spirit of Truth, to them who “will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you” (Jn 14:26). So now we see the Triune God at work as Jesus approaches his passion and suffering.

Consider Jesus’s divinity while he washes the feet of his Apostles. This action was considered so menial that even slaves of the time could not be required to wash their master’s feet. Yet, here is the master, the Christ, washing the feet of his followers. He tells them that they must do likewise. In other words, he is graphically showing them how to be humble and that they, too, and by extension we, must be humble. (Note, however, that this action of ritual washing was part of commissioning the Apostles in their priesthood, in accord with Jewish tradition.)

At the Last Supper, Jesus prays to the Father, and, as he had done previously, shows his unity with the Father when he prays for his followers, “Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me; that they may be one, even as we are one” (Jn 17:11). Again, reflecting on Jesus’s suffering, I go to the Garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus went to pray after the Last Supper, and “his sweat became like great drops of blood falling upon the ground” (Lk 22:44). Soon after this, Judas and a band of soldiers came for Jesus. He asked them, “Whom do you seek”? (Jn 18:4). When they told him “‘Jesus of Nazareth.’ Jesus said to them, ‘I am he’” (Jn 18:5). By using the phrase “I am,” Jesus again united himself to the Father, as this was the way God identified himself to Moses when He sent him to free the Israelites.

There are many other places throughout the Gospels where Jesus is identified as the Son of God, in addition to the term “Son of Man,” which has the same meaning (Mk 1:1, 1:11, Mt 17:5, Mk 9:2, etc.). The devil recognized Jesus as the Son of God in his attempts to test Jesus in the desert (Mt 4:1-11, esp. 4:7, Lk 4:1-13, esp. 4:12). Jesus was identified as the Son of God at the moment Mary consented to God’s request to bear his son through the angel Gabriel (Lk 1:26-38). Thus, throughout his ministry, Jesus was and is identified as the Son of God, the Most High. And, at the foot of the cross, even the Roman centurion recognized Jesus’s divinity (so why do so many NOT recognize this?). “When the centurion and those who were with him, keeping watch over Jesus, saw the earthquake and what took place, they were filled with awe, and said, ‘Truly this was the Son of God!’” (Mt 27:54)

 
 

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