In terms of healing and symbolism, everything hinges
on the cross. The cross is about how to fight and not become a casualty
yourself. The cross is about beingthe victory instead of just
winning a victory. The cross is about refusing the simplistic win-lose scenario
and holding out for a possible win-win scenario.
The cross clearly says that evil is to be
opposed but we must first hold the tension, ambiguity, and pain of it. “Resist
evil and overcome it with good,” as Paul says (Romans 12:21). The cross moves
us from the rather universal myth of redemptive violence to a new scenario of
transformative suffering.
On the cross of life, we accept our own
complicity and cooperation with evil, instead of imagining ourselves on some
pedestal of moral superiority. As Paul taught: “everyone has sinned” (Romans
5:12) and Jesus the Lamb of God had the humility to “become sin” (2 Corinthians
5:21) with us.
The mystery of the cross teaches us how
to stand against hate without becoming hate, how to oppose evil without
becoming evil ourselves. Can you feel yourself stretching in both
directions—toward God’s goodness and also toward recognition of your own
complicity in evil? If you look at yourself at that moment, you will feel
crucified. You hang in between, without resolution, your very life a paradox,
held in hope by God (see Romans 8:23-25).
The goal of God's work is always healing
reconciliation, not retributive justice. And like Jesus, we must invest
ourselves in this work of reconciliation that “the two might become one” (see
Ephesians 2:13-18).
Human existence is neither perfectly
consistent, nor is it total chaos, but it has a "cruciform" shape of
cross purposes, always needing to be reconciled in us. To hold
the contradictions with God, with Jesus, is to participate in the redemption of
the world (Colossians 1:24). We all must forgive reality for being what it is.
We can’t do this alone, but only by a deep identification with the Crucified
One and with crucified humanity. Christ then "carries" us across!
The risen, victorious Jesus gives us a history and
hopeful future that moves beyond predictable violence. He destroys death and
sin not by canceling it out; but by making a trophy of it. Think about that for
a long time until it cracks you open. And it will! – Fr. Richard Rohr, May 5, 2017
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