Fr. Tony's Mid-week 
Message 
December 16, 2015 
Foreshortened 
Grace
St. Augustine had the 
great insight that the miracle stories we see in scripture are often simply 
scenes where the natural processes we see around us are sped up. Water, taken into a living vine, enriched 
by sunlight and soil nutrients over a season, becomes fruit that ripen, are 
crushed and fermented, and becomes wine. Yet 
at Cana, Jesus condenses the natural process and makes it happen in a word. We 
heal from illness slowly and gradually, with nourishment and rest. Yet 
Jesus did it with a touch and a blessing. Miracles summarize, recapitulate, and 
embody what we otherwise see as natural processes. In 
theological terms, a sign from God to be marveled at (what the Latin word miraculum means) shows us in a moment 
the ultimate good intentions and purposes of God. They 
bring close God's final loving purpose. 
In this sense the birth, 
life, and death of Jesus constitute a miracle. By 
becoming wholly human while remaining wholly divine, he shows God's final good 
and loving intention. He heals. He 
announces the Reign of God has already arrived. He 
teaches ethics that seem impossibly demanding to us, but says that with God all 
things are possible. The worst of life is seen in his being rejected, betrayed, 
and unjustly killed. The best hopes we have are seen in his 
being raised and received back by God.  
Biblical scholar and 
bishop N.T. Wright says, 
"The whole point of what Jesus was up to was that he was doing up close, in the present, what he was promising long-term in the future. And what he was promising for that future and doing in the present was not saving souls for a disembodied eternity but rescuing people from the corruption and decay of the way the world presently is so they could enjoy, already in the present, the renewal of creation which is God's ultimate purpose—and so they could thus become colleagues and partners in that large project."
Jesus calls us to follow 
him, to also become foreshortened grace for others.  
Grace and Peace, 
Fr. Tony+ 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

Amen. Thank you, Tony+, for bringing this grace into a thing of beauty and understanding.
ReplyDelete