To be Broken and Given
He was born in a crib and died on a Cross.
He had the company of animals when he was born and two thieves when he died. His
birth was announced to the shepherds first and he chose fishermen to be his
apostles. He lived in Nazareth and was known as a Carpenter’s son.
“You are the light of the world”, he said.
The moment a light is lit, it begins to die. Light is light only if it gives. A
torch or a candle is not meant to be safely locked up because it fears death.
Its identity is to give and to die.
Again he said, ”You are the salt
of the earth." Salt is meant to be thrown into the boiling water. Only by
losing its shape and size, it can give taste. It serves its purpose by dying
and giving.
Again he taught, ”Unless a grain
of wheat falls and dies, it remains a single grain.” Only by going under the
mud and losing its shape and colour, a grain of wheat can produce a hundredfold.
"I am the bread of life”, he said. Unless
bread is crushed and eaten it cannot bring life and health.
The night before he received his
cross, “taking a towel, wrapped it round his waist”, he knelt and washed the feet of his friends, eloquently
and powerfully giving a lesson that our life is meant to serve and to be given.
“He took some bread, gave thanks,
broke it, and gave it.” Here is the
last sermon he preached, before his death. A sermon in action. It is a summary
of his life and preaching. He was chosen by the Father, sent into the world,
consecrated to be broken, and given for the life of the world. Here is a summary of what our lives are meant
for, ‘to be broken and given’.
The cross was not a misfortune that came to Jesus at the end of his life. It was for this he was born. He was born onto a cross. He lived in the shadow of the cross, the theme of the cross is what he lived and taught, the Beatitudes are the victory anthem of those weighed down by the cross, the stable, the salt, the light, the bread, and the grain of wheat, the towel, are all the Stations of the Cross. Finally, when the cross came, he embraced it and gave himself for all on it, and after three days the ‘Grain of Wheat’, sprouted and came forth, yielding a hundredfold for the life of the world. “It is by giving that we receive, it is in dying that we are born to eternal life."
- Fr T.V. George sdb

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