For
this reason the apostle Paul, reflecting on the power of the mystery, said:
Jesus Christ, yesterday and today: he remains the same for ever. For he
understood the mystery as ever new, never growing old through our understanding
of it.
Christ
is God, for he had given all things their being out of nothing. Yet he is born
as man by taking to himself our nature, flesh endowed with intelligent spirit.
A star glitters by day in the East and leads the wise men to the place where
the incarnate Word lies, to show that the Word, contained in the Law and the
Prophets, surpasses in a mystical way knowledge derived from the senses, and to
lead the Gentiles to the full light of knowledge.
For
surely the word of the Law and the Prophets when it is understood with faith is
like a star which leads those who are called by the power of grace in
accordance with his decree to recognize the Word incarnate.
Here
is the reason why God became a perfect man, changing nothing of human nature,
except to take away sin (which was never natural anyway). His flesh was set
before that voracious, gaping dragon as bait to provoke him: flesh that would
be deadly for the dragon, for it would utterly destroy him by the power of the
Godhead hidden within it. For human nature, however, his flesh was to be a
remedy since the power of the Godhead in it would restore human nature to its
original grace.
Just
as the devil had poisoned the tree of knowledge and spoiled our nature by its
taste, so too, in presuming to devour the Lord’s flesh he himself is corrupted
and is completely destroyed by the power of the Godhead hidden in it.
The
great mystery of the divine incarnation remains a mystery for ever. How can the
Word made flesh be essentially the same person that is wholly with the Father?
How can he who is by nature God become by nature wholly man without lacking
either nature, neither the divine by which he is God nor the human by which he
became man?
Faith
alone grasps these mysteries. Faith alone is truly the substance and foundation
of all that exceeds knowledge and understanding.
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From The Five Hundred Chapters by St Maximus the
Confessor
Photo Credit Waiting for the Word
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