September 14, 2025 at Saint Agnes, Saint William & Saint Peter Churches in Naples, FL
Numbers 21 4-9 + Psalm 78 + Philippians 2: 6-11+ John 3: 13-17
As we celebrate today this sign of our hope and salvation, we drawn into the entire plan of God to discover the very nature of God and see what happens when there is obedience to God’s will. There is no way to celebrate the Holy Cross without once again celebrating the Incarnation. The Son of God first poured out and surrendered his glory and his place at the right hand of the Father by taking on human flesh loving what God loves, all creation. Born of a woman, he had to grow, learn, fall and get back up. He used human eyes to see God’s creation, human ears to hear people’s cries, and a human heart to know and share God’s love. He used human touch to heal and his own will to fulfill the Father’s will that we may all flourish and fulfill our vocation to give glory and praise to God in all things.
Saint Paul calls him a slave, someone dedicated completely to the service of another. But this slave was not sold or bought. He chose to be a slave for the sole purpose of doing the will of God. He chose to empty himself in order to make room for God’s mysterious love and power. Doing so demanded hope beyond measure that can only be called: “self-emptying.”
Having emptied himself, he is filled with divine life. This man who had known heaven, chose to reveal heaven to earth. As John tells it today, he compared himself to that serpent on the staff of Moses so that he could be lifted up saving humanity from fear and the death that the serpent had caused. Without that fear of death, we are saved for love, for life, and for glory.
The death of Christ Jesus symbolized by this cross we hold high announces that evil is now as dead as its works. The death of Christ is the beginning of life, a new life lived with the assurance that evil and death will not ever have the last word for God’s love is everlasting and therefor what God loves is everlasting.
When we choose to believe this and raise high the cross, we are choosing to live by faith in the God of life and the God of love. It means that the image of God from the past, a God of anger, vengeance, and terrible punishment is no more. Because that was never the God who loved this creation into existence, and Jesus comes to restore that one true God of mercy and compassion who is revealed in the flesh and blood of his only Son. Believing this means that we bet our lives on God’s undying love. It means that like Jesus Christ, even though we may experience unspeakable pain or sorrow, we have nothing to fear because ultimately evil is nothing more than “chaff driven by the wind.”
Today we rejoice in the wonder of salvation renewed and encouraged to live with and under the sign of the cross by which we have been claimed for Christ our Savior.