Source: https://www.hprweb.com/2014/06/believing-in-the-justice-of-the-cross-jesus-christ-as-the-alpha-and-omega-of-faith/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 01:52:17+00:00

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Adhering with love to the Lord, Victim and Priest, Obedient and Merciful, we embrace him in the real and veiled presence of the broken Bread, and we celebrate the victory against evil, sin, and death.
This essay focuses on the Christological and “Staurological” (from stauros, “cross” in Greek) dimension of our Christian faith, proposing a unique synthesis of biblical thought including Pope Francis’ Lumen Fidei teaching. It stresses the role of the Paschal Christ as archêgos (starting point), as well as teleiotês (consummator) of faith according to Hebrews 12:2—the Alpha and the Omega of Revelation 1:8; 22:13. This path of faith begins with the salvific proposal of the cross as divine love towards human beings (exitus a Deo), and culminates in the personal sharing of the holy justice of Christ’s cross as our sharing in his love for the Father (reditus in Deum). Finally, we shall conclude by linking our faith, our charitable actions, and our prayerful worship as the way of holiness (iter fidei) for all Christians.
Accordingly, I propose here a reflection in light of a short passage from the so-called Letter to the Hebrews. 1 It will not be scientific hermeneutics; it will rather be a theological meditation which will allow us to grasp a unique synthesis of the Pauline, and, generally, neo-testamentary, thought on faith. I believe this is actually the task I was assigned. I will try, as much as possible, to integrate the pontifical teaching of Pope Francis’s Lumen Fidei (June 29th, 2013; hereafter, LF).
With so many witnesses in a great cloud all around us, we too, then, should throw off everything that weighs us down and the sin that clings so closely, and with perseverance keep running in the race which lies ahead of us.
Let us keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, who leads us in (gives rise to) (archegon) faith and brings it to perfection (teleioten). For the sake of the joy (charas) which lay ahead of him, he endured the cross (stauron), disregarding the shame of it (aischynes),and has taken his seat at the right of God’s throne (thronou).
Think that he persevered against such opposition (antilogian) from sinners and then you will not lose heart and come to grief.
In this fragment, the author urges patience (hypomone), which is the most excellent virtue of the Christians; the one which will receive the crown, as St. Augustine 2 said. In support of Christian patience, there is the memory and the fellowship of the saints; seeing ourselves surrounded by so many people who have lived the experience of faith, and have brought it to completion. 3 There is no loneliness in living the faith: we are helped and supported by the witness of others. Yet, perseverance means not succumbing to difficulties, and not giving into tribulations. We must, first of all, look at Christ, whose steadiness is exalted in spite of shame (aischyne) and hostility (antilogia). But the backbone of this exhortation is that this Jesus, 4 who was humiliated and opposed, is actually the one who has been glorified (thronos).
What is faith? We know it is a gift—a virtue—of knowledge and of reliance on the God who reveals himself. But this synthetic text of Hebrews offers us the possibility to grasp his Christological and “staurological” (that is, the doctrine of the cross) heart. At the center of our faith, there is “Christ and Christ crucified” (1 Cor 2:3). To have faith, means to keep your eyes fixed on Jesus. That is the kind of fixed gaze that Peter lost, for he was scared by the waves of the stormy sea (cf. Mt 14:30), but eventually recovered, when he repented after his denial of Jesus the night before he died (cf. Lk 22:61). Looking at Christ, remembering Christ, adhering to him, letting him know us and love us (cf. Gal 2:20), in order to have him, then, dwelling within us (cf Eph 3:17); this is faith.
Let us explore, a little, the two original and intriguing expressions of this text: Jesus is the one who “gives origin” to faith, and he “brings it to fulfillment.” In Greek, two terms resound: archè and telos. In Jesus, we find the beginning and purpose of our belief; he is the alpha and omega of faith. Let us try to understand, or at least to attempt to do so, an interpretation of this affirmation. I also think that we can connect the archè of the faith with the terms cross (stauros), the telos, and the word “throne” (thronos). There is a similar parallelism: our faith begins with the unveiling of the mystery of the cross, and reaches its fulfillment with the eschatological hope of being with Christ at the right hand of the Father (cf. Rev 3:21).
Christ is at the origin of our faith, because in him we have the revelation of the Father’s love for us (cf. Rom 8:32). In him, the fullness of the manifestation of the Divine among mankind is given. The word of the cross, of the crucified love of Christ, is the “verbum abbreviatum.” He is the one who reveals to us the Name of the Father, his word, his love. In Jesus, and in Jesus crucified, God shows us his free, gracious, undeserved love. “God shows his love toward us in the fact that, while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Much more now, justified in his blood, we will be saved from wrath through him” (Rom 5:8-9). Such is the central object of revelation, which is, as an ordinary way of communication, the announcement (kerygma) of the Good News: the “fides ex auditu” (cf. LF §29).
In Romans 10:14-17, the simpler and clearer “phenomenology of the act of faith” can be found: it starts from a divine sending out (of the apostles) who, through their preaching, announce the possibility of faith and confession which will bring salvation. The original point of theological faith consists in adhering to the communication of this love, that is, to accept “with the joy of the Spirit” the announcement of the Good News (1Thes 1:6; Acts 13:48, LF §22). The beginning of salvation happens when I hear the word of God, and I say “Amen” (it is so, it is truly so!) from the depth of my heart, “opened” by the grace to the word of the Gospel that is the “word of the cross” (1Cor 1:18). Saying “yes” to the kerygma, the “door of faith,” is then revealed to us. Welcoming the lordship 5 of Jesus corresponds to the light of the divine graciousness which invades my darkened heart, enclosed in its loneliness, in its fears, in the constraints of its own selfishness. Faith begins this way; or else it cannot begin: the joyful experience of being loved.
Faith does not end with the simple invocation of Jesus’ name. Its purpose is to assimilate us into the object of our believing. It is what we can call, with Paul, “knowing Christ in the Spirit” (cf. 2 Cor 5:17), that is, to be in vital contact with him who is the source of a new humanity, the New Adam, the “life-giving spirit” (1 Cor 15:46). It is about adhering to him to “become one spirit with the Lord” (1 Cor 6:17). In a way, this unification with Christ constitutes the central stage of our life journey of faith. It is the Baptismal and Eucharistic moment, the “insertion in Christ” (Rom 6). Such a union is precisely that—living “for Christ, with him and in him”—which we proclaim in the Eucharistic doxology (Per ipsum).
This seems to me the best magisterial integration of the widely discussed theme of Christ’s Faith (pistis Christou). 10 I would say that Jesus, while remaining the main object of theological faith, becomes the “subject” of our faith, come to maturity, as filial agape.
The action of conversion (metanoia), animated by the Spirit, realizes “the graft” and the conformation to Christ. 11 With faith (which includes baptism as its sacramental seal), the faithful communicates and shares (koinonia) Christ’s love. He participates through the Spirit in the “messianic” action of Christ, in his prophetic proclamation, in his royal power, and in his priestly sacrifice. In the glorious cross, truth, justice, and divine adoration are summarized. The cross becomes teaching chair, throne, and altar. Believing in Christ means taking up the cross, following in his footsteps, and participating existentially in the justice of the cross.
Initially, faith consists in being conquered by Christ (katelempthe/comprehensus sum); the telos is in “conquering Christ” (katalabo/comprehendam). In the beginning, “the grace to believe in Christ” is given to us; at the end, also the grace “to suffer for him” (Phil 1:29). The dawn of salvation is in believing in Christ, Redeemer, but the sunset consists in participating in his mystery, the koinonia of his love passion, in our cooperating for redemption (1 Cor 1:9; Col 1:24).
The heart of faith, its entelechy, its form, and its energy is love. He who adheres to Jesus with faith in the heart, who aspires to his fullness in hope, and always strives to live in one spirit with him, partakes in the upward movement of Christ to the Father: he shares in Christ’s eternal self-offering to the Father in the Spirit (Heb 9:14). We can understand, then, what Paul means when he speaks about being “co-crucified” with Christ (cf. Gal 2:19), making ourselves “imitators of God” (Eph 5:2). Christ brings our faith to fulfillment, living in us, associating us to his paschal mystery, fulfilling in us his works—that is, loving with his love, crying out in our hearts, “Abba, Father!”(Rom 8:15).
Let us now answer two further questions: how should we articulate the relationship between faith and works? Second, how are we to avoid the so-called “christomonism” in this radically Christocentric perspective of faith? I believe that we absolutely need to avoid “hypostatizing” faith or the theological virtues. It is beautiful to use parables, as the French poet Charles Péguy did, comparing the three theological virtues to three sisters, but we never must forget that faith, as such, doesn’t exist. What exists is the believer, the individual and concrete person, who believes, hopes, and loves. This corresponds to the “personalistic” conception of faith proposed by Vatican II’s Dei Verbum (cf. §5). Such a global vision, it seems to me, is our answer to God, the conditio sine qua non, to correctly understand the relation of faith to works.
Let us ask ourselves how to reconcile Paul and James, Luther and Trento? It seems to me that the notion of “fecundity” of faith, held by Pope Francis (LF §7;§19), may help to settle the old dilemma. In the end, “works” will be taken into account (rather!) in the last judgment (cf. 2 Cor 5:10)—because “good and beautiful works” (kalà erga) 12 stem from faith like rays from fire.
We conclude with a very important issue: the Trinitarian and doxological dimension of faith. 16 If Christ is the center and fulcrum of our faith, it is only because he is both Son and Messiah, the one who is eternally generated by the Father in the power of the Spirit. 17 We might say that such generation has three realizations: an eternal one within the Father, one in history through the paschal mystery, and one mystical and sacramental one in our baptism and Eucharistic participation. Faith in Christ reveals itself as true and authentic only if it leads us to participate in the personal, paschal, and filial dynamic of Jesus—his calling in the Spirit, with trust and worship for the one who has always been the Alpha and the Omega of his life—the Father. Through Christ, who is the One who gathers humanity in One Body: “we have access (prosagoghè), both the ones and the others, to the Father in one Spirit” (Eph 2:18). Now, “in the Eucharist we have Jesus, we have his redeeming sacrifice, we have his resurrection, we have the gift of the Holy Spirit, we have the worship, the obedience, and the love toward the Father” (John Paul II, Ecclesia de Eucharistia §60). So that, “the Eucharistic action in itself is the Church’s greatest act of worship” (Benedict XVI, Sacramentum Caritatis §66), and such worship happens in the Spirit, the source of the theological dynamic. By instilling in us the anamnesis of Christ (cf. Jn 14:26), the Spirit unites us in the greatest proclamation of Faith/Truth: “we announce your death….” (cf. 1 Cor 11:26), and impels us to invoke the blessed hope of his Parousia (“waiting for your coming,” Marana tha!), and to offer ourselves to him, and with him, to the Father in brotherly love (cf. Gal 4:6; Eph 5:2; Heb 9:14).
Adhering with love to the Lord, Victim and Priest, Obedient and Merciful, we embrace him in the real and veiled presence of the broken Bread, and we celebrate the victory against evil, sin, and death. Communicating on earth to the slain and triumphant Lamb (cf. Rev 5:6), we continue in the paths of history the redemption of the world, and the glorification of God the Father. United in one Spirit to Christ, we become the community of the Amen and Yes; “praise of the divine glory”; and “for Christ, with Christ, and in Christ.” We offer to the Father “every Honor and Glory.” “In the Eucharist we learn to see the heights and depths of reality. The bread and wine are changed into the body and blood of Christ, who becomes present in his passover to the Father: this movement draws us, body and soul, into the movement of all creation towards its fulfillment in God. (LF §44).
Fr. Lorenzo Rossetti was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Rome on May 22, 1994. Since 2003, he has served as a Fidei Donum Missionary throughout Albania. He is currently the rector of the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Lezhe, as well as a professor of theology at the Theological Institute of Shkodra, Albania. He is the author of numerous books and articles.

References: §29
 §22
 §5
 §7
 §60
 §66
 §44