"Remember, I am with you always to the end of the age" (Mt 28:20)

The "Magnificent Humanity" of Christ the Eternal Priest

OldRoadFromJerusalemToJericho
Old Road From Jerusalem To Jericho

F
irst: As the Church awaited the election of the next Pope after Pope Francis, a friend shared with me the “wishlists” people were posting online. Most of them highlighted the following qualities: It is not the usual wishlist like "I hope we get somebody who has at least some experience as a parish priest. I hope we get someone who has heard confessions and done marriage counseling..." No. This time it is: "I hope we get someone who really has a sister or brother who has been divorced. I wish he had a niece or a nephew who belongs to the LGBTQ+ community."

Then I told my friend that it is a wishlist that is not just for a Pope, it is for everyone. There is a great clamor to have somebody who has a first degree bond with real-life issues because people believe they are more capable of binding or reconnecting a fragmented society. They have the material to heal and reconcile the broken. They are themselves the "glue" that will be used to bind. This is the meaning of Christ's priesthood, a priesthood that binds together the broken pieces.

In the parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus gives us a surprising image of the priesthood. A man lies wounded on the roadside, broken by violence and abandoned by others. First comes a priest, then a Levite. Both see the wounded man, yet both keep their distance and pass by. Perhaps they feared ritual impurity. Perhaps they did not want to be interrupted. Whatever the reason, they preserve separation rather than communion.

Then comes the Samaritan — an outsider. Yet he is the one who draws near. He touches the wounds. He pours oil and wine. He lifts the wounded man onto his own beast and leads him to a place of healing. Like a shepherd carrying an injured sheep, he does not leave the wounded man abandoned on the roadside but accompanies him with his presence.

And in this way, the Samaritan becomes an image of Christ the Eternal Priest and Good Shepherd. The priesthood of Christ is not first about distance or status. It is about binding what has been broken and gathering back to the fold. Like the Samaritan, Jesus crosses boundaries, heals wounds, and pours himself out.

Second: The priest is called not only to bind wounds, but also to lead people toward life. Like the Good Shepherd, Christ does not remain beside the injured sheep only to heal it; he also guides it back to green pastures and flowing waters. The priesthood of Christ is therefore not merely restorative but nourishing.

A shepherd searches for the lost sheep, gathers the scattered flock, and leads them to where they can live and grow. He knows that healing is only the beginning. The sheep must also be fed. They must be led to pasture.

So too with Christ the Eternal Priest. He not only forgives and restores; he nourishes, guides, and accompanies. He leads his people toward truth, communion, and abundant life. He pastures the flock through the nourishment of the Word, the Eucharist, and the steady care of accompaniment when he sends the flock out to pasture. He must accompany them in order to warn them of wolves nearby.

Pope Leo XIV just released his very first papal encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas (Magnificent Humanity). Pope Leo is offering guidance on the biggest issues of our time, namely, Artificial Intelligence.

Here’s what he said. Pope Leo calls AI a “valuable tool," but he warns that, it is "a valuable that requires vigilance" (MH 100). AI must never replace what is deeply human. He cautions against a society where technology destroys livelihoods, spreads misinformation, weakens families and human relationships, makes war easier, and concentrates dangerous power in the hands of a few. The real question, he says, is whether humanity will become a culture driven by power and efficiency or a civilization rooted in love, dignity, and authentic human communion.

Here are two powerful quotes from Pope Leo's letter:
"In the era of artificial intelligence when human dignity is threatened by new forms of dehumanization, ours is the pressing duty to remain profoundly human" (MH 15). "No computational system, however sophisticated, can create a heart that gives itself, or a conscience that discerns good from evil. Even when machines excel in efficiency, a human face that asks to be gazed upon remains the center of our history. This human face is the fullness toward which history is moving" (MH 233).
This brings me to my third point.

I fondly remember the late Fr Luis Candelaria SJ, whom we affectionately called “Lolo.” He lived to 95 and aged with remarkable grace. Before my ordination to the priesthood, I asked him what advice he could give me. His answer was short and unforgettable. Only two words: “Be human.”

The priesthood of Christ is rooted in being fully human. For only by being truly human can one bind the broken, show mercy and compassion, and above all, love. “We are not human beings searching for love, we are love searching for human experience.” Teilhard de Chardin SJ

God, who is love, searched for human experience when he lived as a human being with us, and this became the matter of his Eternal Priesthood.

The priesthood of Christ is a universal human calling, like the Good Samaritan who binds the wounds of his neighbor. Second, the priesthood of Christ calls us to pasture and accompany those entrusted to our care, especially through protection and guidance. And third, let us not be afraid to be human, for this is at the very heart of Christ’s priesthood. Amen. Fr JM Manzano SJ

Comments

  1. Wow! Wonderful reflection, Father. 😇
    For me, Father Luis's advice, "Be human," made me reflect on how we sometimes think holiness consists of distancing ourselves from our humanity, as if feeling, crying, getting tired, or loving deeply were obstacles to achieving holiness. God didn't reject our humanity, but embraced it fully. In Jesus, God was hungry, felt friendship, wept at the death of a friend, was moved by suffering, and loved with a human heart. Therefore, Christ's priesthood doesn't stem from a cold and inaccessible perfection, but from a humanity capable of compassion. On another note, I also really liked the quote from Father Pierre Teilhard that you used in your reflection: "We are not human beings seeking love, but love seeking human experience." God, who is love, wanted to experience our lives from within. He wanted to touch our wounds, walk our paths, and carry our crosses. Therein lies the greatness of Christ's priesthood, in a love that doesn't remain distant, but draws near and accompanies. To be truly human means making room for tenderness, mercy, and closeness. The Good Samaritan doesn't save with words, but by bending down to the wounded, touching their wounds, and staying by their side. Likewise, priests, and indeed all Christians, are called to be a presence that heals, a listener that consoles, and an accompanier. Your reflection on this encyclical invites me to think that we shouldn't be afraid of our humanity. Often we want to hide our weaknesses or feign constant strength. But Christ wasn't afraid to show himself vulnerable; even from the cross, he revealed the greatest love. Humanity isn't a limit for God; it's the place where he desires to manifest himself. Perhaps that's why Father Luis's (Lolo😇) advice, "Be human," is also an invitation to "be like Christ" ("sé cómo Cristo"). Because the more deeply human we are, the more capable we are of loving, having compassion, accompanying, and serving, because God gave us that capacity! Salmat po, father JM!😇🙏

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    1. Interesting, you've reflected on Father Jomari's reflections. Someone once told me that if I want to know a person's inner self, I should listen to their reflections or contemplations. I know Father Jomari through his famous reflections and for their spiritual guidance, and now I can see how the depth of his thoughts touches you deeply and moves you to express what's inside. You are a worthy disciple of his, or perhaps a spiritual daughter, i am not sure how to describe you.

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    2. Beautifully said, Andrea, thank you! I like what you said about being human means being like Christ. I recall Pope Francis, who had a radical way of saying this same truth: The wounds of Christ, still visible after his resurrection, are the greatest sign of God's love and mercy. He exhorted all of us to "touch the wounds of Jesus" present in the Church, His body! GBU!

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    3. Yes father, and he bore witness to that! He asked us to be a Church that goes out to the neediest, to the excluded, because he had experienced it firsthand; he gave us the example. I remember when he was still Cardinal Bergoglio, when he would visit the most marginalized neighborhoods of Buenos Aires and reach out to those who were suffering, the forgotten, the poor, those wounded in body or spirit. For him, it wasn't just about seeing other people's wounds, but about being moved by them and responding with mercy. He always sought to connect with others with that simplicity that so characterized him. He was Cardinal Bergoglio, he was Pope Francis, but he never stopped being a true Jesuit!

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    4. Very true. Pope Francis remained a shepherd at heart! 😇

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