This most recent time I pulled it off the shelf, fully forgetting my reason for scanning my book shelves, and I began to reread some of the book. Now, someone told me once, (my spiritual director I think) that it is not the number of books that you read that is a most important thing, but, the number of books that you re-read. I have not re-read the entire book. Each time I pick it up I go to certain sections that struck me as particularly meaningful or especially beautifully phrased.
I offer here a brief snippet from the very last chapter in the book, Cross and Resurrection
.
But “God shows his love for us in that while we were yet
sinners Christ died for us … while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by
the death of his Son” (Rom.5:8,10) … The sentence which in principle determined
our fate was performed upon Jesus Christ on behalf of sinners: in him we were
crucified and condemned to death; in him we were made the recipients of grace
and adopted as children. In him and without any activity on our part, God’s
anger toward us has changed into tender, caring love. All this has become a
reality, in and through Christ, in the Father’s heaven: our task is to let it
come true in all its fullness in our temporal existence on earth.
In the New Covenant “what we ought to do” follows from “what
we are”. We are justified and should
act accordingly. We have died with Christ, we have been buried and raised with
him, and this should determine our behavior: we should no longer live in sin;
the “old man” is dead and we should
actually regard him as such, daily encountering his resistance to the death
sentence served upon him, making him die daily (Rom 6). pp. 295-296
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