Monthly Bible
Commentaries
Becoming like Christ
1 John 3:1-3Saint Irenaeus, bishop of Lyons in the second century, concentrated the meaning of the incarnation in a formula: God became man so that man could become God. The coming of God to earth is thus the preliminary to another and even more astonishing event: human beings become God. But it is a God who is manifested in the destitution, ignorance and powerlessness of a newborn babe or a crucified man.
We are thus on the road between an origin that we cannot entirely grasp and a destination that we do not imagine. This transition requires our active participation. We become more ourselves when we awaken the presence of Christ in our hearts, beyond the doors kept shut by fear, failures, anger or humiliation. He offers us his peace and sends us to live it out in the warp and woof of human relationships, in a world wounded by injustice and violence. Yes, to the extent that we allow his peace and forgiveness act in our lives, his Spirit is at work in us and in the world and life blossoms.
We are thus not just from here or there, this or that individual; we are not just our resume, our medical file or our bank account; we are not defined by our plans, our failures, our refusals or our convictions. Our identity is revealed in a longing liberated from every attachment, ready and willing, because borne by the call and the gift of Another. What we will be has not yet been made known, says the first letter of John, but we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. We have already put on Christ, received a name and commandment that open us to new relationships. The roots that nourish us are not only a cultural patrimony, a family history, a treasure transmitted by those who open the way for us. They also lie before us, in what we do not yet see but to what we are destined. The upheavals in society cannot damage them as much as a spirit of resignation or laziness that lead us to distance ourselves from a living communion with God.