“When
the soldiers had crucified Jesus, they
took his clothes and divided them into
four shares, a share for each soldier.
They also took his tunic, but the tunic
was without seam, woven in one piece
from the top down. So they said to one
another, ‘Let’s not tear it, but cast
lots for it to see whose it will be,’ in
order that the passage of Scripture
might be fulfilled that says: ‘They
divided my garments among them, and for
my vesture they cast lots'” (John
19:23-24).
Symbolism
of unity expressed in John's
Gospel
It has always been
asked what the evangelist John wanted to
say with the importance that he gives to
this particular detail of the Passion. One
relatively recent explanation is that the
tunic alludes to the vestment of the high
priest and that with this, John wanted to
affirm that Jesus died not only as king
but also as priest.
It is not
said in the Bible, however, that the tunic
of the high priest had to be seamless (cf.
Exodus 28: 4; Leviticus 16:4). For this
reason the most authoritative of the
exegetes prefer to stick to the
traditional explanation, according to
which the seamless tunic symbolized the
unity of the disciples.[1] It is the
interpretation that St. Cyprian already
gave: “The unity of the Church,” he
writes, “is expressed in the Gospel when
it is said that the tunic of Christ was
not divided or cut.”[2]
Jesus
prayed and died for the unity of his
disciples
Whatever be the
explanation that one gives to the text,
one thing is certain: The unity of the
disciples is, for John, the purpose for
which Christ dies. “Jesus had to die for
the nation, and not only for the nation,
but also to gather into one the dispersed
children of God” (John 11:51-52). At the
Last Supper he himself said: “I pray not
only for them, but also for those who will
believe in me through their word, so that
they may all be one, as you, Father, are
in me and I in you, that they also may be
in us, that the world may believe that you
sent me” (John 17:20-21).
Unity is a gift to
be received
The glad tidings to
proclaim on Good Friday are that unity,
before it is a goal to be sought, is a
gift to be received. That the tunic is
woven “from the top down,” St. Cyprian
continues, means that “the unity brought
by Christ comes from above, from the
heavenly Father, and because of this it
cannot be broken apart by those who
receive it, but must be received in its
integrity.”
The
soldiers divided “the clothes,” or the
“the cloak,” (“ta imatia”) into four
pieces, that is, Jesus’ outer garments,
not the tunic, the “chiton,” which was the
inner garment, which was in direct contact
with his body. This is also a symbol. We
men can divide the human and visible
element of the Church, but not its deeper
unity, which is identified with the Holy
Spirit. Christ’s tunic was not and can
never be divided. It too is of a single
piece. “Can Christ be divided?” Paul cried
out (cf. 1 Corinthians 1:13). It is the
faith we profess in the Creed: “I believe
in the Church, one, holy, catholic and
apostolic.”
A
visible communitarian unity
But if unity must serve as a sign “so that
the world believe,” it must also be a
visible, communitarian unity. This is the
unity that has been lost and must be
rediscovered. It is much more than
maintaining neighborly relations; it is
the mystical interior unity itself — “one
body, one Spirit, one hope, one Lord, one
faith, one baptism, one God Father of all”
(Ephesians 4:4-6) — insofar as this
objective unity is in fact received, lived
and manifested by believers. A unity that
is not endangered by diversity, but
enriched by it.
After
Easter the apostles asked Jesus: “Lord,
are you at this time going to restore the
kingdom to Israel?” Today we often address
the same question to God: Is this the time
in which you will restore the visible
unity of the Church? God’s answer is also
the same as the one Jesus gave to the
disciples: “It is not for you to know the
times or seasons that the Father has
established by his own authority. But you
will receive power when the Holy Spirit
comes upon you, and you will be my
witnesses” (Acts 1:6-8).
“Unity with God and our
brothers and sisters is a gift
that comes from on high, which
flows from the communion of love
between Father, Son and Holy
Spirit in which it is increased
and perfected.”
- Pope Francis
|
The Holy Father recalled this in a homily
he gave on January 25 in the Basilica of
Saint Paul Outside the Walls at the end of
Christian Unity Week: “Unity with God and
our brothers and sisters,” he wrote, “is a
gift that comes from on high, which flows
from the communion of love between Father,
Son and Holy Spirit in which it is
increased and perfected. It is not in our
power to decide when or how this unity
will be fully achieved. Only God can do
it! Like St Paul, let us also place our
hope and trust ‘in the grace of God which
is with us.'”
Today as
well, the Holy Spirit will be the one to
lead us into unity, if we let him guide
us. How was it that the Holy Spirit
brought about the first fundamental unity
of the Church, that between Jews and
pagans? The Holy Spirit descends upon
Cornelius and his whole household in the
same way in which he descended upon the
apostles at Pentecost. So, Peter only
needed to draw the conclusion: “If then
God gave them the same gift he gave to us
when we came to believe in the Lord Jesus
Christ, who was I to be able to hinder
God?” (Acts 11:17).
For a
century now, we have seen the same thing
repeat itself before our eyes on a global
scale. God has poured out the Holy Spirit
in a new and unusual way upon millions of
believers from every Christian
denomination and, so that there would be
no doubts about his intentions, he poured
out the Spirit with the same
manifestations. Is this not a sign that
the Spirit moves us to recognize each
other as disciples of Christ and work
toward unity?
It is
true that this spiritual and charismatic
unity is not enough by itself. We see this
already at the beginning of the Church.
The newly formed unity between Jews and
Gentiles was immediately threatened by
schism. In the so-called Council of
Jerusalem there was a “long discussion”
and at the end an agreement was reached
and announced to the Church with the
formula: “It is the decision of the Holy
Spirit and of us…” (Acts 15:28). The Holy
Spirit works, therefore, also through
another way, which is that of patient
exchange, dialogue and even compromise
between the different sides, when the
essentials of the faith are not in play.
He works through human “structures” and
the “offices” put in action by Jesus,
above all the apostolic and petrine
office. It is that which today we call
doctrinal and institutional ecumenism.
Spiritual ecumenism is
born through
repentance and nourished by
prayer
However,
experience is convincing us that even this
doctrinal ecumenism is not sufficient and
does not advance matters if it is not also
accompanied by a foundational spiritual
ecumenism. This is repeated with ever
greater insistence by the major promoters
of institutional ecumenism. In this
centenary of the institution of the week
of prayer for Christian unity (1908-2008),
at the foot of the cross we would like to
meditate on this spiritual ecumenism, on
what this spiritual ecumenism is and how
we can make progress in it.
Spiritual
ecumenism is born through repentance and
forgiveness and is nourished by prayer. In
1977, I participated in a charismatic
ecumenical congress in the U.S., in Kansas
City, Missouri. There were 40,000
participants, half of them Catholic —
Cardinal Suenens among them — and half
from other Christian denominations. One
evening, one of the leaders of the meeting
began speaking at the microphone in a way
that, to me, at that time, was strange:
“You priests and pastors, weep and mourn,
because the body of my Son is broken. …
You laypeople, men and women, weep and
mourn, because the body of my Son is
broken.”
I began
to see people around me fall to their
knees, one after another, and to weep with
repentance for the divisions in the body
of Christ. And all of this went on while a
sign reading “Jesus is Lord” went up from
one part of the stadium to the other. I
was there as an observer who was still
rather critical and detached, but I
remember thinking to myself: If one day
all believers shall be reunited in one
single body, it will happen like this,
when we all are on our knees with a
contrite and humiliated heart, under the
great lordship of Christ.
The unity of
Christ's disciples is
based on love
If
the unity of the disciples must be a
reflection of the unity between Father and
Son, it must above all be a unity of love,
because such is the unity that reigns in
the Trinity. Scripture exhorts us to “do
the truth in love” — “veritatem facientes
in caritate” (Ephesians 4:15). And
Augustine affirms that “one does not enter
into the truth if not through charity” —
“non intratur in veritatem nisi per
caritatem.”[3]
The
extraordinary thing about this way to
unity based on love is that it is already
now wide open before us. We cannot be
hasty in regard to doctrine because
differences exist and must be resolved
with patience in the appropriate contexts.
We can instead “be hasty” in charity and
already be united in that sense now. The
true, certain sign of the coming of the
Spirit, St. Augustine writes, is not
speaking in tongues, but it is the love of
unity: “Know that you have the Holy Spirit
when you allow your heart to adhere to
unity through sincere charity.”[4]
Let us
reflect on St. Paul’s hymn to charity.
Each verse acquires a contemporary and new
meaning if it is applied to the love of
members of different Christian
denominations in ecumenical relations:
“Love is patient…
Love is not jealous…
It does not seek its own interests…
It does not brood over injury… (if
necessary, of the injury done to
others!)
It does not rejoice over wrongdoing
but rejoices with the truth (it
doesn’t rejoice over the difficulties
of other Churches, but delights in
their successes)
It bears all things, believes all
things, hopes all things, endures all
things” (1Corinthians 13:4ff.).
Moving
together toward Christ, we draw
nearer to each other
“Loving,”
it has been said, “does not mean looking
at each other but looking together in the
same direction.” Even among Christians
loving means looking in the same
direction, which is Christ. “He is our
peace” (Ephesians 2:14). It is like the
spokes of a wheel. Consider what happens
to the spokes of a wheel when they move
from the center outward: As they distance
themselves from the center they also
become more distant from each other. On
the contrary when they move from the
periphery toward the center, as they come
closer to the center, they also come
nearer to each other, until they form a
single point. To the extent that we move
together toward Christ, we draw nearer to
each other, until we are truly, as Jesus
desired, “one with him and with the
Father.”
That
which will reunite divided Christianity
will only be a new wave of love for Christ
that spreads among Christians. This is
what is happening through the work of the
Holy Spirit and it fills us with wonder
and hope. “The love of Christ moves us,
because we are convinced that one has died
for all” (2 Corinthians 5:14). The brother
who belongs to another Church — indeed
every human being — is “a person for whom
Christ died” (Romans 14:16), as he has
died for me.
An
ecumenism of faith
One thing
must move us forward on this journey. What
is in play at the beginning of the third
millennium, is not the same as what was in
play at the beginning of the second
millennium, when there was the separation
of East and West; nor is it the same as
what was in play in the middle of the same
millennium when there was the separation
of Catholics and Protestants. Can we say
that the way the Holy Spirit proceeds from
the Father or how justification of the
sinner comes about are the problems that
impassion the men of today and with which
the Christian faith stands or falls? The
world has moved beyond us and we remain
fixed by problems and formulas that the
world does not even know the meaning of.
In
battles in the Middle Ages there was a
moment in which, after the infantry,
archers and cavalry had been overwhelmed,
the melee began to circle around the king.
There the final outcome of the fight was
decided. Today the battle for us also
takes place around the king. There are
buildings and structures made of metal in
such a way that if a certain neuralgic
point is touched or a certain stone is
removed, everything falls apart. In the
edifice of the Christian faith this
cornerstone is the divinity of Christ. If
this is removed, everything falls apart
and faith in the Trinity is the first to
go.
From this
we see that today there are two possible
ecumenisms: an ecumenism of faith and an
ecumenism of incredulity; one that unites
all those who believe that Jesus is the
Son of God, that God is Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, and that Christ died to save
all humankind, and an ecumenism that
unites all those who, in deference to the
Nicene Creed, continue to proclaim these
formulas but empty them of their content.
It is an ecumenism in which, in its
extreme form, everyone believes the same
things because no one any longer believes
anything, in the sense that “believing”
has in the New Testament.
“Who is
it that overcomes the world,” John writes
in his first letter, “if not those who
believe that Jesus is the Son of God?”
(1John 5:5). Sticking with this criterion,
the fundamental distinction among
Christians is not between Catholics,
Orthodox and Protestants, but between
those who believe that Christ is the Son
of God and those who do not believe this.
Take courage and work
together for unity because the Lord
is with you
“On the
first day of the sixth month in the second
year of King Darius, the word of the LORD
came through the prophet Haggai to the
governor of Judah, Zerubbabel, son of
Shealtiel, and to the high priest Joshua,
son of Jehozadak…: ‘Is it time for you to
dwell in your own paneled houses, while
this house lies in ruins?'” (Haggai
1:1-4).
This word
of the prophet Haggai is addressed to us
today. Is this the time to concern
ourselves with that which only regards our
religious order, our movement, or our
Church? Is this not precisely the reason
why we too “sow much but harvest little”
(Haggai 1:6)? We preach and we are active
in many ways, but we convert few people
and the world moves away from Christ
instead of drawing near to him.
The
people of Israel heard the prophet’s
reproof; everyone stopped embellishing his
own house and began to work together on
God’s temple. God then sent his prophet
again with a message of consolation and
encouragement, which is also addressed to
us: “But now take courage, Zerubbabel,
says the Lord, and take courage, Joshua,
high priest, son of Jehozadak, And take
courage, all you people of the land, says
the Lord, and work! For I am with you,
says the Lord of hosts” (Haggai 2:4). Take
courage, all of you who have at heart the
cause of the unity of Christians, and go
to work, because I am with you, says the
Lord!
___________________________
Notes
[1] Cf. R. E. Brown, “The
Death of the Messiah,” vol. 2,
Doubleday, New York 1994, pp. 955-958.
[2] St. Cyprian, De unitate
Ecclesiae, 7 (CSEL 3, p. 215).
[3] St. Augustine, Contra Faustum,
32,18 (CCL 321, p. 779).
[4] St. Augustine, Sermons,
269,3-4 (PL38, 1236 s)
Translated
from Italian by Joseph G. Trabbic
Source:https://zenit.org/articles/good-friday-sermon-of-father-cantalamessa-2/
top photo
of Good Friday procession of the cross
in Jerusalem, source