Sunday Gospel Reflection
September
14, 2025 Cycle C
John
3:13-17
Reprinted
by permission of the “Arlington Catholic Herald
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True love by its very
nature greatly
desires the good of the other. Authentic love is sacrificial. It
sets aside
personal desires, preferences and even genuine needs for the
sake of the
beloved. Real love stops at nothing in its effort to lift and
care for the
treasured one. Jesus Christ demonstrated true love for every
creature made in
his image and likeness through his humble entrance into this
world, his three
years of public ministry and, most especially, the surrender of
his life on the
cross in loving obedience to the father.
I never tire of
marveling at how
various events, persons and prophecies in the Old Testament
point so remarkably
to the life and ministry of Jesus. Today, for instance, we gaze
upon an event
in the life of Moses and the Hebrew people as they are making
their way from
Egypt through the desert to the Promised Land. Once again, the
people lose
sight of all that God had done to care for them and grumble
about the struggle
to find food and water. As a result, the Lord sends seraph
serpents among the
people which bite them. Moses prays for the people and the Lord
responds, “Make
a seraph and mount it on a pole, and if any who have been bitten
look at it,
they will live.”
There is remarkable
irony in this
story. The very thing that is causing them to suffer and die is
to be raised up
for their sacred viewing. As they gaze upon this mounted
serpent, they are
healed. This image is a strong reference to the cross of Christ.
Jesus’ mission
to heal the whole world from the bite of sin is achieved through
the cross, the
most hideous way in which Romans tortured and made a spectacle
of the greatest
criminals in their day. To gaze upon Christ mounted upon the
cross with faith
is to find healing for the worst ills that beset humanity and to
open the door
to eternal life.
Sept. 14 is the day the
church
celebrates the Exaltation of the Cross. We will never fully
comprehend its
beauty, its import or the abyss of love revealed on the cross,
but we make the
effort on this day to ponder its beauty, praise and worship God
for what his
beloved Son did on the cross and seek the grace to respond to
God’s love with
more love than ever before.
The cross of Christ is
the earthly
locus of the greatest act of love that the world has ever known.
The cross is
the visible instrument by which Jesus redeemed every human being
from sin and
death. The cross represents the crowning moment in the
sacrificial
self-emptying of Jesus. It was the last stop on Jesus’ earthly
mission to
restore our broken relationship with God and establish his
kingdom of love and
truth in history. The cross is the tree of life from which we
are fed on our
journey to heaven and find refuge in the father’s tender mercy.
The cross is
the staff that God used to strike the rock of Gethsemane from
which a river,
the greatest of rivers, the river of mercy flows until the end
of time.
Heavenly Father, we
thank you from the
depths of our being for all that your Son, Jesus, did for us on
the cross. We
know that he suffered in a way that is beyond our comprehension.
The one thing
greater than his suffering is the love that led him to endure
it. “For God so
loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who
believes in him
might not perish but might have eternal life.”
It is no wonder that the
cross of
Christ is the principal and most enduring symbol of our
Christian faith.