Here we are, it's Maundy Thursday and we're faced with two mandates, to "love one another as I have loved you," and "This is my body... this is my blood... do this..." With Christ washing his disciples' feet and then celebrating the first Mass on the night before he suffered.
The two might seem unrelated or even discordant, especially liturgically, but hold on, the one follows the other. Jesus washing his followers' feet is an act of humble love and where is this brought to a point, exemplified, played out to the full?
On the Cross. "He humbled himself taking the form of a servant and became obedient, even unto death on a cross," and again, "Greater love hath no man but to lay his life down for his friends." The foot washing, then, serves as a type or figure of the crucifixion.
And what is the Last Supper, the first Eucharist, but that same sacrifice made present for us under the forms of bread and wine? This is my body, this is my blood, given and shed for us upon the Cross to cleanse us from sin. So we find ourselves back at Jesus washing his disciples' feet.
In the face of such a gift, of God's unfathomable love for us given in sacrifice on Calvary, what can we do but love him back and in doing so keep his commandment to love one another as he loved us.
Watch and Pray,
LSP
"Watch and pray lest ye be led into temptation..." A great sentence uttered at a profound time.
ReplyDeleteWhat LL said. Pray always.
ReplyDeleteAnd so we must, LL. I feel Our Lord's warning is especially relevant right about now as evil climbs to a pyramid peak of wickedness.
ReplyDeleteExtra duty, Paul.
ReplyDelete