Why Jesus?
God's Love for You: The Gospel of Jesus the Messiah
The World Around Us
Every person longs for happiness and love. This is the most
basic desire present deep within every human heart - including
yours.
Sometimes, the stunning beauty of the world around us awakens
or
increases
within us this deep yearning for
“more.” At other times we may be struck by the
beauty and goodness of the people around us whom we know and
love. We are fascinated by the mystery of humanity which often reflects
so much truth, beauty and goodness.
Yet at the same time we also know that there is something
terribly wrong with
the world, so often marred by ugliness, evil and suffering. Everywhere
we hear of poverty, illness, injustice, selfishness, anger, crime,
violence, cruelty, and war, to the point that life can easily become
filled with fear, loneliness, pain, hopelessness and despair. Many
people try to temporary escape from this harsh reality
through the elusive and artificial paradises of drugs, alcohol, or
temporary relationships, but these in the end only increase our pain
and alienation from the world. Sometimes we find comfort in genuinely
good things, such as music, entertainment, sport, hobbies, work,
friends, and family - yet deep down inside we know that these
things cannot fully satisfy our restless heart.
Can we make any sense of this world, so beautiful
yet wounded by so much evil and suffering?
God's Love for Creation
God, infinitely perfect and blessed in himself, in a
plan of sheer
goodness freely created man to make him share in his own blessed
life. (CCC 1)
The good news is that God created the world* and everything in
it - including you - out of infinite love. God is not just some
impersonal force, but a personal
God who knows you and loves you more than you could ever imagine. He
knew you already while you were in your mother's womb:
For you created my inmost being; you knit
me
together in my mother's womb. (Ps 139:13)
He knows where
you come from, where you have been, and where you are going.
He also knows every single one of your thoughts, your hopes,
your joys, your
pains, and your fears:
O LORD, you have searched me and you know
me. You
know when I sit and when I rise; you perceive my thoughts from
afar. You discern my going out and my lying down; you are
familiar with all my ways. Before a word is on my
tongue you know it completely, O LORD. (Ps 139:1-4)
God loves you with infinite love, just as He loves every
person in the
world, and He has a wonderful plan for you: He has created you so that
you may participate in His own divine life of love (2 Pet 1:4) so that
you could be happy with Him forever:
I have loved you with an everlasting
love; Therefore with loving kindness I have drawn
you. (Jer 31:3)
For I know the thoughts that I think toward you,
says the
LORD,
thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a
hope. (Jer 29:11)
At the beginning of human history, God formed a covenant* with
the human family - a sacred family bond, by which we are adopted as
God's children whom He loves and cares for. God calls each one of us
into this covenant relationship: to share
friendship with Him and each other as His family, trusting and obeying
Him in everything.
Our Freedom
Yet God does not impose Himself upon us, and He does not force
us to love Him. True love must always be a gift freely given. God made
us free so that we may be able to love Him and one another. Our freedom
is a great gift, but because of this freedom we have the
choice to
receive
God’s offer of life and love, or to reject it:
I call heaven and earth as witnesses today against
you, that I
have
set before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose
life, that both you and your descendants may live; that you may love
the LORD your God, that you may obey His voice, and that you may cling
to Him, for He is your life and the length of your days.
(Deut
30:19-20)
Sin
The bad news is that we have all broken God's covenant.
Because we have the freedom to choose “not
God,” sin* enters the world. Sin is the root of all
the
evil and suffering around us. We sin when we turn away from God, from
His goodness and from His truth, and instead of obeying His
commandments, we go our own way and act as we please, often in a
selfish way, making wrong choices and living without having Him at the
center of our life. Our sin causes a break in our relationship
with
God and separates us from Him and from his life. The Bible
reminds us of
something we already know: that we have all sinned, rebelled, and
turned away from
God, at least to some extent in our own lives:
The LORD looks down from heaven on humankind to see
if there
are any
who are wise, who seek after God. They have all gone astray,
they
are all alike perverse; there is no one who does good, no, not one. (Ps
14:2-3)
Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity; and in sin
did my
mother
conceive me. (Ps 51:5)
For there is not a just man on earth who does good and does not sin.
(Eccl 7:20)
All have sinned and fall short of the glory of
God.
(Rom 3:23)
Death
The terrible consequence of sin is death (Rom 6:23). We tend
to treat death as the normal and inevitable end of life. Yet at the
deepest core of our being we are terrified of death - of the
possibility that we may cease to exist, or worse, that we may be
eternally separated from the source of all love, all joy,
all peace and all happiness. We have lost sight of the fact that, in
the beginning, God had never intended death to be a normal part of
life. Still, each one of
us longs for immortality in some way. We all would like to
live a life
free of suffering, illness and death where we could enjoy without limit
the
good things of the world. And indeed, death is not our ultimate
destiny. God has called us to life, life in all
of its fullness. It is only because of the presence of sin in the
world - our willful turning away from God - that death now reigns:
…but of the tree of the
knowledge of
good and
evil you
shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely
die. (Gen 2:17)
Whoever has sinned against me I will blot out of my
book. (Ex 32:33)
But your iniquities have separated you from God; and your sins have
hidden His face from you, so that He will not hear. (Isa 59:2)
The soul that sins, it shall die. (Ezek 18:4)
Bridging the Gap
Whether we believe in God or not, whether we are consciously
aware that suffering and death are constantly looming over our fragile
lives, we
all bury ourselves in a flurry of activities to try to find peace
within ourselves, to "make things right" with God and with others, to
appease our conscience, to find a reason for our existence, and to
leave our mark, in some way, in this brief life. We may try to do this
through popularity, wealth, or power; through great learning, success
in business, artistic creativity, or generous works of mercy;
through philosophy, meditation, or religion.
Yet we are simply not capable on our own of repairing the
break between
us and God. He is infinitely holy, and we are sinful.
Trying to
bridge the infinite gap between us and Him is trying to jump over the
English channel from France to England. Some of us will jump three
feet; those in good shape may jump six feet, but all of us
will fall infinitely short of reaching the goal. In the same way, the
Bible tells us that our efforts, no matter how well intended, cannot
of themselves overcome the infinite chasm between us and God and
restore us to Him:
There is a way that seems right to man, but in the
end it
leads to
death. (Prov 14:12)
Thus says the LORD: "Cursed is the man who trusts in man and
makes
flesh his strength, whose heart departs from the
LORD.”
(Jer 17:5)
No king is saved by the size of his army; no warrior escapes
by his
great strength. A horse is a vain hope for deliverance; despite all its
great strength it cannot save. But the eyes of the LORD are on those
who fear him, on those whose hope is in his unfailing love, to deliver
them from death and keep them alive in famine. (Ps 33:16-19)
Unless the LORD builds the house, they labor in vain who
build
it;
Unless the LORD guards the city, the watchman stays awake in
vain. (Ps 127:1)
Our human nature is too wounded and too weak to return to the
state of supernatural holiness and goodness in which God made us in the
beginning. Who of us can overcome death by his good works? Though every
natural act of goodness and generosity has value before God, His
infinite holiness and perfection prevent us from coming into His
presence because of our sin. Trying to live in His presence in our
fallen state is more impossible than living on Mars. Just as we need
special equipment to breathe and live on that planet, we also need
new, supernatural powers in order to live again in God's presence and
partake of His life.
God had to provide the way for us to return to Him. Only He
can give us these supernatural powers.
Atoning Sacrifices
Long ago, God chose one people, the people of Israel, though
whom He began to reveal Himself to the world in preparation for his
great redemption of humanity from the damage caused
by sin. God delivered Israel out of Egyptian slavery,
adopted them as His own special people and gave them the Torah, the law
by which they were to live as God’s people. The Israelites
were bound to keep many commandments as a response in faith and
obedience to God redeeming them and adopting them. Yet keeping
commandments, though important, was never meant to be the
exclusive way for Israel to earn their salvation. In order to be
"right" with God, they needed to place their faith and trust in Him,
keep the commandments, and participate in the tabernacle
worship which included offering bloody animal sacrifices to
atone for their sins.
When God delivered the Israelites from slavery, He commanded
them to slay a lamb and sprinkle its blood on the doorposts of their
houses so that
they would be protected from the
angel of death who would strike the firstborn of the Egyptians (Exo
12). Later,
the Israelites had to perpetually offer blood sacrifices on the altar
of the tabernacle and temple to atone for their sins. On the Day of
Atonement (Yom Kippur),
the Holiest day of the Jewish year, the high priest had to enter the
innermost part of the sanctuary, the Holy of Holies, with the
blood of a goat which he was to sprinkle on the mercy seat, the seat of
God's tangible presence, in order to atone for the sins of the people
(Lev 16).
Every day, while the Temple in Jerusalem stood, the blood of lambs was
shed on the altar (Exo 29).
Why would God have ordained such a messy, bloody ritual? The
book of
Leviticus gives us the answer:
For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I
have given
it to you
to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that
makes atonement for one's life. (Lev 17:11)
As we have seen above, the wages of sin is death. Because we
have sinned, we deserve to die. Our blood deserves to be shed. God's
justice requires it. Yet God's mercy wishes to forgive us and to give
us a new beginning every time we sin. If God would just wipe us out of
existence this would be just, but not merciful. If He would just
forgive us all at no cost, it would be merciful but not just - just
think of how we naturally desire that those who do evil would be
punished and that reparation would be made for wrongs done. This is the
reason why God instituted the sacrifice of animals. The sin, guilt and
punishment deserved by the sinner was transferred onto the animal
sacrificed. Its blood would be shed instead of the blood of the sinner;
it would die in his place. The blood of the sacrifice covered and
atoned for the sins of the person who offered it, who would then be
restored into fellowship with God. We can imagine the enormous cost of
sheep and cattle being offered daily in the temple. This signified that
sin has a heavy price; that price, however, was nothing in
comparison to
our debt towards God. Yet God deemed these sacrifices
sufficient for the time,
because they were but a foreshadow of a much greater
sacrifice that was to come.
But 70 C.E., the Romans destroyed the Jerusalem Temple and
brought a definitive end to the offering of sacrifices. Where is now
the sacrifice that atones for the sins of Israel?
God's Solution: Jesus the Messiah
For God so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting
life.
(Jn 3:16)
Fortunately, God provided a final, definitive and universal
solution to fix
our sin problem. Two thousand years ago, He sent His Son, called Yeshua
(Jesus)*, the Messiah of Israel* , to form a New Covenant with Israel and
to show us the way back to
God. Jesus proclaimed repentance and the coming of the Kingdom
of God. He healed sicknesses, forgave sins, and showed us how to live
as
children of God. He came for four principal reasons (CCC 457-460):
- He came to
save us by reconciling us with God, through
the offering of Himself as sacrifice for our sins;
- He came to
reveal the Father’s love for us, through his
words and deeds;
-
He came to be our model of holinesss and to show us how
to live as God's children: "love one another as I have loved you" (Jn
15:12);
- He came to
make us partake of God’s life, as God had
intended it from the very beginning.
Jesus the Savior
Jesus, the eternal Word and Son of God, took on our
mortal nature and offered his life as an atoning sacrifice for our sins
to reconcile us with
God. His death on the cross was the Paschal sacrifice* that fulfilled
all the sacrifices of the Old Covenant. He took on our punishment so
that we may be set free and forgiven:
But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was
bruised for our iniquities; The chastisement for our peace was upon Him, and by His
stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we
have turned, every one, to his own way; and the Lord has laid on Him
the iniquity of us all. (Isa 53:5-6)
By dying, Jesus conquered sin and death. Yet His work did not
stop there. On the third day, He was physically raised from the dead by
the power of the Holy Spirit. He then sent the Holy Spirit to dwell
within us to reconcile us and
make us one with God (1 Cor 15:3-8, Rom 5:5) and reconcile us to one
another. By His resurrection, Jesus opened the way for us
to heaven and eternal life. The gates to paradise, which had been
closed since the entrance of sin into the world, were opened again.
Jesus, true God and true man, is the bridge between God and
man. He has come to reconcile us with God and give us a new life of
faith, hope and love as beloved children of God the Father.
If
we accept Jesus and His message, we have accepted the fullness of
God’s plan.
I am the way, the truth and the life. No
one comes
to the Father except through me. (Jn 14:6)
The Work of the Apostles
In the days when He ministered in the Galilee, Jesus called
twelve apostles whom He prepared to continue his mission. He gave a
special role to Simon, renaming him Peter, "the rock." Jesus
gave the future leadership of the Church to Peter when He said
to him:
You are Peter, and on this rock I will build My
church, and
the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. And I will
give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on
earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be
loosed in heaven. (Mat 16:18-19)
On the day of Pentecost, forty days after the resurrection,
the Holy Spirit came down on the apostles. This was the birth of the
Church*. Initially, the Church was entirely made up of Jews who believed that Jesus is the promised Messiah of Israel. Soon after, the Church began to also receive Gentiles in her midst, and it became the "place" where Jews and Gentiles could be reconciled in their common worship of the God of Israel. The apostles, with Peter at their head, were the leaders of the
early Church, who continued the work of Christ. As the Church grew, the
apostles ordained bishops and passed on to them the spiritual authority*
that Jesus had given them:
He who hears you hears Me, he who rejects you rejects
Me. (Lk 10:16)
The things that you have heard from me among many
witnesses,
commit these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also. (2
Tim 2:2)
Today, the pope*, the successor of Peter, and the bishops
are
the successors of the apostles. Together they continue the work of
Jesus and the apostles in teaching His words, administering the
sacraments which convey Christ's life, and in governing the
Church.
The New Birth
Jesus said that we must be born again, of water
and the Spirit, to enter the kingdom
of God:
Amen, amen, unless one is born again, he cannot
see the
kingdom of God... no one can enter the kingdom of God unless he is
born of water and the Spirit.” (Jn 3:3,5)
The new birth “of water and the
Spirit” is
faith in Christ and baptism*.
Through baptism, we become members of the Church, the Body of Messiah.
For Jews, to be baptized does not mean to forsake Judaism. On the contrary, baptism fulfills the promise God made to Israel through the prophet Jeremiah: "I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean... I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh" (Jer 36:26-27). Baptism is "the washing of regeneration and renewal by the Holy Spirit"
(Tit 3:5) which cleanses us from our sins, identifies us with Christ's
death and resurrection, restores us to friendship with God, and is the
door to eternal life. Jesus himself said that faith in Him and baptism
are essential for salvation; this is why He gave to his followers the
Great Commission to go into all the world and make
disciples of all nations, so that all may have a chance to turn away
from sin and be
reborn to eternal life in Christ:
Go into all the world and preach the good news
to all
creation.
Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not
believe will be condemned. (Mk 16:15-16)
The Catholic Church
Jesus founded the Catholic (universal) Church*, guided by the
Holy Spirit and led by the successor of Peter, the pope*, to continue
His work on
earth. The Catholic Church is
God’s
worldwide family. Through the Church, called in the Bible the "pillar
and foundation of truth," Jesus shares with us the
way, the truth and the life that make us a new creation and restore us
to divine sonship.
I write so that you may know how you ought to conduct
yourself in
the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and
foundation of the truth. (1 Tim 3:15)
We are united with Christ and receive God’s life
particularly in the
liturgy* and sacraments* of the Church. Through these seven sacraments,
beginning with baptism, the Holy Spirit comes to us in a powerful way
and transforms us so that we may grow in God's likeness, goodness and
love. The greatest of the
sacraments is the Eucharist*: the sacrifice of the New Covenant and the
family meal that nourishes us with Christ's own body and blood (Jn
6:51-58, Lk 22:19-20). The other sacraments are confirmation*,
reconcilation (confession)*, the anointing of the sick*, matrimony*, and
holy orders*.
Jesus also has
given us his mother, Miriam (Mary)*, to be our own spiritual mother (Jn
19:27). Mary loves us, prays for us, watches over us from
heaven and helps us in the battle against evil (Rev 12). As
God’s children, we are earthly pilgrims heading home to heaven,
our true homeland where we will share forever God’s life and
love with him and with each other (Phil 3:20).
Our Response
God calls us to repent
by turning away from sin and selfishness, accept Jesus
and believe
in what
He taught, choose
to follow Him, and be baptized into
new life. He calls us to join ourselves
to his Body, the Church (Acts 2:38), so that we can grow in
the likeness of God until we are ready to participate in His life in heaven
forever.
This is our choice. Sin is a reality, and so is death. God is
the source of all life. If we stubbornly reject Him in this life, then
He will respect our choice and will allow us to remain separated from
Him forever in the next life. This is hell, the "state of
definitive self-exclusion from communion with God and the blessed" (CCC
1033). Jesus sternly warned about the existence of hell (Mt 13:41-42,
25:41), and exhorted us to...
Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is
the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by
it. Because narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which
leads to life, and there are few who find it. (Mat 7:13-14)
It is not God's desire that anyone would be lost. He calls us to choose
life and salvation. He has made us so that we may love Him and serve
Him in this life, and be with Him together forever in heaven in a state
of perfect fulfillment and happiness. May this be our choice to seek
and find Him today.
For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our
Savior, who
desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the
truth. (1 Tim 2:3-4)
What to do Next
If you feel that God may be calling you into the Catholic Church:
- Build your relationship with God. Pray daily - speak with Him and ask Him to lead you and guide you into His truth and
light.
- Study the Catholic faith, either with Catholics
for Israel, or through other Catholic resources (see links).
- Find a Catholic Church in the area and begin to attend Mass and to learn about Catholic prayer and liturgy.
- Get together with faithful Catholics who know and love
their faith so that they can help you progress on your journey to God.
- Speak with a priest about your desire to become Catholic. Pay close
attention to what he says, and make sure he is faithful to the Church.
If you find that he dissents from any of the Church's
teachings as taught in the Catechism,
or tells you that you don't really need to become Catholic, leave and
find another priest.
The Gospel of Jesus the Messiah in a Nutshell
- God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life.
- Sin separates us from God. We are not capable of
repairing
this break on our own.
- Jesus has come to reconcile us with God and give us eternal
life.
- Jesus has given us the Church though which he shares with
us the way,
the truth and the life.
- God calls us to repent, to choose to follow Jesus and to
join ourselves
to his Body, the Church.
See also:
The Gospel Message* (PowerPoint)
The Story of Salvation
Is God Calling You into the Catholic Church?
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