The
Two-Fold Nature of Christ
Among all
the works of God's mercy, dearly-beloved, which from the beginning have been
bestowed upon men's salvation, none is more wondrous, and none more sublime,
than that Christ was crucified for the world. For to this mystery all the
mysteries of the ages preceding led up, and every variation which the will of
God ordained in sacrifices, in prophetic signs, and in the observances of the
Law, foretold that this was fixed, and promised its fulfilment: so that now
types and figures are at an end, and we find our profit in believing that
accomplished which before we found our profit in looking forward to. In all
things, therefore, dearly-beloved, which pertain to the Passion of our Lord
Jesus Christ, the Catholic Faith maintains and demands that we acknowledge the
two Natures to have met in our Redeemer, and while their properties remained,
such a union of both Natures to have been effected that, from the time when, as
the cause of mankind required, in the blessed Virgin's womb, the Word became
flesh, we may not think of Him as God without that which is man, nor as man
without that which is God. Each Nature does indeed express its real existence
by actions that distinguish it, but neither separates itself from connection
with the other. Nothing is wanting there on either side; in the majesty the
humility is complete, in the humility the majesty is complete: and the unity
does not introduce confusion, nor does the distinctiveness destroy the unity.
The one is passible, the other inviolable; and yet the degradation belongs to
the same Person, as does the glory. He is present at once in weakness and in
power; at once capable of death and the vanquisher of it. Therefore, God took
on Him whole Manhood, and so blended the two Natures together by means of His
mercy and power, that each Nature was present in the other, and neither passed
out of its own properties into the other.
The
two natures acted conjointly, and the human sufferings were not compulsory, but
in accordance with the Divine will
But
because the design of that mystery which was ordained for our restoration
before the eternal ages, was not to be carried out without human weakness and
without Divine power , both form does that which is proper to it in common with
the other, the Word, that is, performing that which is the Word's and the flesh
that which is of the flesh. One of them gleams bright with miracles, the other
succumbs to injuries. The one departs not from equality with the Father's
glory, the other leaves not the nature of our race. But nevertheless even His
very endurance of sufferings does not so far expose Him to a participation in
our humility as to separate Him from the power of the Godhead. All the mockery
and insults, all the persecution and pain which the madness of the wicked
inflicted on the Lord, was not endured of necessity, but undertaken of
free-will: for the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which had perished
Luke 19:10: and He used the wickedness of His persecutors for the redemption of
all men in such a way that in the mystery of His Death and Resurrection even
His murderers could have been saved, if they had believed.
Judas' infamy has never been exceeded
And
hence, Judas, you are proved more criminal and unhappier than all; for when
repentance should have called you back to the Lord, despair dragged you to the
halter. You should have awaited the completion of your crime, and have put off
your ghastly death by hanging, until Christ's Blood was shed for all sinners.
And among the many miracles and gifts of the Lord's which might have aroused
your conscience, those holy mysteries, at least, might have rescued you from
your headlong fall, which at the Paschal supper you had received, being even
then detected in your treachery by the sign of Divine knowledge. Why do you
distrust the goodness of Him, Who did not repel you from the communion of His
body and blood, Who did not deny you the kiss of peace when you came with
crowds and a band of armed men to seize Him. But O man that nothing could
convert, O spirit going and not returning , you followed your heart's rage,
and, the devil standing at your right hand, turned the wickedness, which you
had prepared against the life of all the saints, to your own destruction, so
that, because your crime had exceeded all measure of punishment, your
wickedness might make you your own judge, your punishment allow you to be your
own hangman.
Christ voluntarily bartered His glory for our weakness
When,
therefore, God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself 2 Corinthians
5:19, and the Creator Himself was wearing the creature which was to be restored
to the image of its Creator; and after the Divinely-miraculous works had been
performed, the performance of which the spirit of prophecy had once predicted, then
shall the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf shall hear; then
shall the lame man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall be plain
Isaiah 35:5-6; Jesus knowing that the time was now come for the fulfilment of
His glorious Passion, said, My soul is sorrowful even unto death Matthew
26:38-39; and again, Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me
Matthew 26:38-39 . And these words, expressing a certain fear, show His desire
to heal the affection of our weakness by sharing them, and to check our fear of
enduring pain by undergoing it. In our Nature, therefore, the Lord trembled
with our fear, that He might fully clothe our weakness and our frailty with the
completeness of His own strength. For He had come into this world a rich and
merciful Merchant from the skies, and by a wondrous exchange had entered into a
bargain of salvation with us, receiving ours and giving His, honour for
insults, salvation for pain, life for death: and He Whom more than 12,000 of
the angel-hosts might have served for the annihilation of His persecutors,
preferred to entertain our fears, rather than employ His own power.
St.
Peter was the first to benefit by his Master's humiliation
And how
much this humiliation conferred upon all the faithful, the most blessed Apostle
Peter was the first to prove, who, after the fierce blast of threatening
cruelty had dismayed him, quickly changed, and was restored to vigour, finding
remedy from the great Pattern, so that the suddenly-shaken member returned to
the firmness of the Head. For the bond-servant could not be greater than the
Lord, nor the disciple greater than the master , and he could not have
vanquished the trembling of human frailty had not the Vanquisher of Death first
feared. The Lord, therefore, looked back upon Peter , and amid the calumnies of
priests, the falsehoods of witnesses, the injuries of those that scourged and
spat upon Him, met His dismayed disciple with those eyes wherewith He had
foreseen his dismay: and the gaze of the Truth entered into him, on whose heart
correction must be wrought, as if the Lord's voice were making itself heard
there, and saying, Where are you going, Peter? Why do you retire upon yourself?
Turn to Me, put your trust in Me, follow Me: this is the time of My Passion,
the hour of your suffering is not yet come. Why do you fear what you, too,
shall overcome? Let not the weakness, in which I share, confound you. I was
fearful for you; be confident of Me.
The
mad counsel of the Jews was turned to their own destruction
And when
morning had come all the chief priests and elders of the people took counsel
against Jesus to put him to death Matthew 27:1 . This morning, O you Jews, was
for you not the rising, but the setting of the sun, nor did the wonted daylight
visit your eyes, but a night of blackest darkness brooded on your naughty
hearts. This morning overthrew for you the temple and its altars, did away with
the Law and the Prophets, destroyed the Kingdom and the priesthood, turned all
your feasts into eternal mourning. For you resolved on a mad and bloody
counsel, you fat bulls, you many oxen, you roaring wild beasts, you rabid dogs
, to give up to death the Author of life and the Lord of glory; and, as if the
enormity of your fury could be palliated by employing the verdict of him, who
ruled your province, you lead Jesus bound to Pilate's judgment, that the
terror-stricken judge being overcome by your persistent shouts, you might
choose a man that was a murderer for pardon, and demand the crucifixion of the Saviour
of the world. After this condemnation of Christ, brought about more by the
cowardice than the power of Pilate, who with washed hands but polluted mouth
sent Jesus to the cross with the very lips that had pronounced Him innocent,
the licence of the people, obedient to the looks of the priests, heaped many
insults on the Lord, and the frenzied mob wreaked its rage on Him, Who meekly
and voluntarily endured it all. But because, dearly-beloved, the whole story is
too long to go through today, let us put off the rest till Wednesday, when the
reading of the Lord's Passion will be repeated. For the Lord will grant to your
prayers, that of His own free gift we may fulfil our promise: through our Lord
Jesus Christ, Who lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
By Saint Leo the Great
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