Sep 14 Sun
What is the essence of being a Christian?
To be a Christian means being united to Christ, Christ on the Cross.
To co-redeem with Christ, we have to be united to our Lord on the Cross, and not avoid sacrifices in daily life.
St. Josemaría wrote: “Being a Christian is not simply a way to personal gratification; it implies a mission... Being a Christian is not something secondary; it is a divine reality that takes root deep in our lives. It gives us a clear vision and strengthens our will to act as God wants.
“So, we learn that the Christian's pilgrimage in the world must express itself in continuous service in all kinds of ways, varying with each person's circumstances, but always motivated by love for God and our neighbor.
“Being a Christian means forgetting petty objectives of personal prestige and ambition and even possibly dignified aims, like philanthropy and compassion for the misfortunes of others. It means setting our mind and heart on reaching the fullness of love which Jesus Christ showed by dying for us."
“Let me give you an example of the kind of attitude that develops if one is unable to penetrate this mystery of Jesus. Some people tend to see Christianity as a collection of devout practices, failing to realize the relation between them and the circumstances of ordinary life, including the urgency to meet the needs of other people and remedy injustice.
I would say that anyone who has that attitude has not yet understood the meaning of the Incarnation. The Son of God has taken the body and soul and voice of man; He has shared our fate, even to the extent of experiencing the excruciating anguish of death. Yet perhaps without wanting to, some people regard Christ as a stranger in the world of man."
“Others tend to imagine that to remain human, we need to play down some central aspects of Christian dogma. They act as if the life of prayer, the continual relationship with God, implied fleeing from responsibilities and leaving the world. But they forget that it was none other than Jesus who showed us the extreme to which we should go in love and service. Only if we try to understand the mystery of God's love - a love which went as far as death - will we be able to give ourselves totally to others and not let ourselves be overcome by difficulties or indifference."
The path to becoming a true Christian is that of the Cross. We are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him so that we may also be glorified with him. There is no other way.
Christ, the principal heir, attained the inheritance of glory by his Passion. "Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer and so enter into his glory?" We cannot hope to attain the same inheritance more easily. We, too, must reach it through suffering; we must not seek ourselves.