Reflection for the Paschal Triduum
"Jesus goes forth into the night. Night signifies lack of communication, a
situation where people do not see one another. It is a symbol of
incomprehension, of the obscuring of truth. It is the place where evil,
which has to hide before the light, can grow. Jesus himself is light and
truth, communication, purity and goodness. He enters into the night.
Night is ultimately a symbol of death, the definitive loss of fellowship
and life. Jesus enters into the night in order to overcome it and to
inaugurate the new Day of God in the history of humanity....
"We think we are free and truly ourselves only if we
follow our own will. God appears as the opposite of our freedom. We need
to be free of him – so we think – and only then will we be free. This
is the fundamental rebellion present throughout history and the
fundamental lie which perverts life. When human beings set themselves
against God, they set themselves against the truth of their own being
and consequently do not become free, but alienated from themselves. We
are free only if we stand in the truth of our being, if we are united to
God. Then we become truly “like God” – not by resisting God,
eliminating him, or denying him. In his anguished prayer on the Mount of
Olives, Jesus resolved the false opposition between obedience and
freedom, and opened the path to freedom. Let us ask the Lord to draw us
into this “yes” to God’s will, and in this way to make us truly free."
--Pope Benedict XVI, Homily, April 5, 2012
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