Today is the feast of St. Peter Chrysologus, a bishop and doctor of the Church whose preaching was so inspired that he was called "Golden Word." He only lived about fifty years, but the 183 sermons of his that we have
continue to speak to us over 1500 years
after his death. In one of them, he reflects on St. Paul’s Letter to the
Romans, 12: 1: “I urge you, therefore, brothers and sisters, by the mercies of God, to
offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God, your
spiritual worship.” These words are at
the heart of what we strive to do in the Apostleship of Prayer: to live a
Eucharistic life, a life in which we offer ourselves one day at a time with
Jesus who offers himself to the Father for the salvation of the world. The following is from Homily 108 of St. Peter Chrysologus:
How marvelous is the priesthood of the
Christian, for he is both the victim that is offered on his own behalf, and the
priest who makes the offering. He does
not need to go beyond himself to seek what he is to immolate to God: with
himself and in himself he brings the sacrifice he is to offer God for
himself. The victim remains and the
priest remains, always one and the same.
Immolated, the victim still lives: the priest who immolates cannot
kill. Truly it is an amazing sacrifice
in which a body is offered without being slain and blood is offered without
being shed.
Paul says: “I appeal to you by the mercy of God to present your bodies as a
sacrifice, living and holy.” The prophet
said the same thing: “Sacrifices and offering you did not desire, but you have
prepared a body for me.” Each of us is
called to be both a sacrifice to God and his priest. Do not forfeit what divine authority confers
on you. Put on the garment of holiness,
gird yourself with the belt of chastity.
Let Christ be your helmet, let the cross on your forehead be your
unfailing protection. Your breastplate
should be the knowledge of God that he himself has given you. Keep burning continually the sweet smelling
incense of prayer. Take up the sword of
the Spirit. Let your heart be an
altar. Then, with full confidence in
God, present your body for sacrifice.
God desires not death, but faith; God thirsts not for blood, but for
self-surrender; God is appeased not by slaughter, but by the offering of your
free will.
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