I just finished reading an article in our diocesan newspaper entitled “God Willed His Son’s Faithfulness, Not His Crucifixion.”
snip
The article says that God sent His Son to bring His love into the world and that He became human in order to sympathize with our weaknesses.
Please check out John 3: 16-17. Notice the words “eternal life.”
To understand this article properly one needs to look for what is missing. What does the article’s idea that “God sent His Son to bring His love into the world and that He became human in order to sympathize with our weaknesses.” say about eternal life?
If all Jesus had to do was to be faithful, how does that specifically reconcile humanity with Divinity? Actually, the real question is – What really happened that would require Jesus Christ to assume human nature?
To become human in order to sympathize with our weaknesses? So the State of Original Sin is simple weakness. Not according to the Catholic Church. And why would God have to become human in order to understand (sympathizing) the human nature He created? If God needs to send His son in order to bring His love into world, that sounds more like a second-rate Creator.
People should be uneasy with this article.
I am sure someone will say that
everybody knows all the nitty-gritty about Original Sin and the doctrines surrounding the real Adam who freely chose to scorn his Creator with his act of deliberate, with full knowledge, disobedience. Not in this century.
Not all wolves in sheep’s clothing use the same tools to hack away our Catholicism. However, the ultimate goal is usually to chip away at Christ’s Divinity because that Divinity is important to the belief that Jesus Christ is truly present in the Holy Eucharist. How should that name Holy Sacrifice of the Mass be changed to indicate its step down to non-invasive faithfulness?
Going back to the sentence “To understand this article properly one needs to look for what is missing.” First, some technical points have to be examined. Technically, an article such as this one does not have to mention the reason which necessitated Christ’s divinity. And being faithful, technically, can indicate obedience, but faithfulness does not demand Crucifixion. Surely, Jesus would have known the difference between faithfulness and dying a horrific death.
Finally, technically, an ordinary human can be faithful to God, and can sympathize with other humans, and can explain God’s love in the world. That being the case, there is no reason this Jesus person has to be true God. This throws out chapter 6 of the Gospel of John.
To solve the problem of what is missing. The editor should have substituted an article that was more in keeping with the actual mission of Jesus Christ according to Catholic doctrines. On the other hand, maybe the fundamental Catholic doctrines surrounding Genesis 3:15 were unknown.