In his 2002 Message for Lent, Saint John Paul II challenged the Church with the Lord’s
words: “‘You received without paying, give without pay’” (Mt 10:8). “The
heavenly Father’s saving plan was completed in the free and total gift to us of
the only begotten Son,” the late Holy Father wrote. Man did not deserve such a
gift, but out of love, God freely chose to give His own life in order to draw
us “back into communion with himself.”
This free and total gift
was the perfect sacrifice, and it stands forever as the model of sacrificial love. The
Lenten season is a fitting time to recall “the mystery of the Lord’s Death and
Resurrection,” as Saint John Paul II wrote, and it is a time when all Christians should “marvel in their heart of hearts at the greatness of such a gift.”
In recognizing the price of his own
redemption, man cannot help but feel profound gratitude for God’s sacrifice. We
express this gratitude through prayer, celebration of the Sacraments, and as
the late Holy Father reminded the Church, a free and total gift of
ourselves:
Since we have received this life
freely, we must in turn offer it freely to our brothers and sisters. This is
what Jesus asked of the disciples when he sent them out as his witnesses in the
world: “You received without paying, give without pay.” And the first gift to
be given is the gift of a holy life, bearing witness to the freely given love
of God. May the Lenten journey be for all believers an unceasing summons to
enter more deeply into this special vocation of ours. As believers, we must be
open to a life marked by “gratuitousness,” by the giving of ourselves
unreservedly to God and neighbor.
As we accept the gift of grace, given to us
through the sacrificial love of God Himself, we cannot help but give it back to
Him through lives of holiness and gratuitousness. We cannot help but fall more
deeply into our unique vocations and, like Jesus, give our very selves to
others without asking anything in return.
When the Lord gave Himself for us, He gave His
life as the ultimate sacrifice. We too sacrifice something when we make a gift
of our lives to those in need. In this sacrifice, we “realize ever more deeply
that what we give to others is our response to the many gifts that the Lord
continues to give to us,” Saint John Paul II wrote. God continues to give to us
without receiving any payment, and so we should move forward this Lent, giving
without pay.
Oh beloved John Paul II, you sacrificed your life
as a gift of love for others. Please pray for us this Lent, that we may be like you in imitating God’s perfect sacrifice.
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