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Cardinal Augustine Meyer once wrote that, “Nothing great is ever achieved
without suffering.”
His words come back to me every year during Holy Week. They remind us that
discipleship always has a cost. No Christian ever lives the Gospel without eventually
encountering the cross. During the Triduum — Holy Thursday, Good Friday,
Holy Saturday — the Church invites us to remember that sin is real and
that only blood can redeem it . . . but also that God loves us so deeply
that He sent His only son to offer Himself for our deliverance.
In giving His life for us, Jesus asks us to live our lives for others. He
asks us to share in His work of redemption. That’s why the Gospel is never
merely a call to be “nice” to others. There’s nothing sweet
about Golgotha. Life in Jesus Christ is a call to heroic and self-sacrificing
love. If we want to rise with Jesus on Easter, we also have to share His work
of salvation on Good Friday.
C.S. Lewis captured this basic Christian understanding very clearly when he
wrote that, “Christianity is a thing of unspeakable joy. But it begins
not in joy, but in wretchedness, and it does no good to try to get to the joy
by bypassing the wretchedness.”
Of course, the nature of everyday America in 2008 is that we all live our
lives in routines — routines that tend to dull us into self-absorption
at work, at play, in our families, and also in our religious faith. Even the
broken body of Christ on the cross can become a standard piety, an object of
devotion that doesn’t really touch our hearts. That’s why these
days of Holy Week are so vital. Holy Week is the most sacred time of the year.
It’s a time to wake up from our routines and shake off the distractions
of daily life — and to concentrate on the One in whom we anchor our hope.
This year, listen to the Word of God with new ears. Make some personal
room for silence this week. Read and pray over the Gospel accounts of the crucifixion.
Venerate the cross. Remember the price paid for your redemption. Understand
how zealously God loves you . . . and when you do, you’ll begin to understand
the meaning of the Gospel and the urgency of your own vocation to bring the
fruit of God’s love — new life in Jesus Christ — to others.
Good Friday is an end: an end to death; an end to our old selves and our old
selfishness. Easter Sunday is a beginning, the beginning of a new and “unspeakable
joy”: for each of us and all of us. The sorrow of Holy Week is the doorway
to something infinitely more beautiful.
So may God grant you and your family, and all of us, a blessed Holy Week —
and a holy and joy-filled Easter!
Your brother in Christ,
+Archbishop of Denver Charles Chaput, O.F.M. Cap.