Pints With Aquinas - Did Jesus need to be Redeemed? - Fr. Gregory Pine, O.P.
Episode Date: February 20, 2023Fr. Pine talks about why Jesus did not need to be redeemed 🟣 Join Us on Locals (before we get banned on YT): https://mattfradd.locals.com/ 📖 Fr. Pine's Book: https://bit.ly/3lEsP8F ✝️ Sho...w Sponsor: https://hallow.com/mattfradd 🖥️ Website: https://pintswithaquinas.com/ 🟢 Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/pintswithaquinas 👕 Merch: https://shop.pintswithaquinas.com 🚫 FREE 21 Day Detox From Porn Course: https://www.strive21.com/ 🔵 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattfradd 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattfradd We get a small kick back from affiliate links.
Transcript
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So Thomas Aquinas wrote Daily Meditations for Lent.
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Hello, my name is father Gregory pine and I'm a Dominican friar of the province of st. Joseph and this is pines of the Aquinas
So I preached a homily recently and after having preached that homily somebody
Kind of tracked me down and confronted me and explained to me that I was wrong.
And the point about which I was wrong was whether or not Jesus needed to be redeemed.
So I said that he did not need to be redeemed, and this person was insisting that he did need to be redeemed.
So we had a mildly contentious conversation, which was left unresolved with our relative disagreement.
But I had the opportunity to reflect
a little bit about it subsequently,
so I thought I would take the opportunity to explain
why it is important that Jesus is not redeemed,
but then how we might salvage
something of the other person's point.
So, let's go for it.
Okay, so I preached a homily.
It was on the Feast of the Presentation or Purification of Mary.
And the point was to show that our Lord Jesus Christ lives his human life for our salvation, not for his own as it were.
And the point was that the Gospel of Luke, when it introduces that whole sequence, which takes place in the context of the temple and you have the encounter with you know Mary and Joseph bring our Lord forty days after his birth you've got the two
turtle doves signifying the fact that they're poor they present the child to
Simeon and Simeon says now Lord you can let your servant go in peace your word
has been fulfilled and then you have that subsequent encounter with Anna who
has been in the temple precincts for some time now what's fascinating about the passage is that it starts like a redemption narrative but
then no further details of the redemption are recounted. So the question
is like what's going on here or what type of redemption is at stake? So let's
back up a little bit, talk about what redemption might mean in the setting of
you know first century Israel or first century Judah and then talk a little bit more about redemption means to
us as Christians in the 21st century. So yes, the first sense, like the kind of
Old Testament biblical sense of redemption, is associated with the Exodus
and if you're looking at the book of Exodus chapters
12 and 13 there you find evidence of three particular rites that would have
been performed by the Israelites so as to commemorate their departure from
Egypt when the Lord saved them, delivered them by bringing them through
the Red Sea and destroying Pharaoh with his chariots and charioteers. Those three rites are Passover, circumcision, and redemption.
So Passover would have been commemorated by the whole family.
Circumcision would have been commemorated in the flesh of all the male sons of the
family, and then redemption would have been commemorated in the firstborn.
And a redemption ceremony basically, I mean, it kind of unfolded like this. The father
would bring the child to a Levitical priest, not necessarily to the temple itself in Jerusalem,
but to a Levitical priest and then he would kind of leave the child as it were before the priest.
And then the priest would say, do you claim this child as your own? And the father would respond,
yes, I do. And then the priest would say,, well then pay the price. And then the father would have
some amount of money whereby he would redeem the child. And then he would leave with the
child, the child knowing in a kind of metaphysical sense that he had been purchased at a price
that he was claimed as the son of his father. Some people will associate this with the fact
that in Hebrew scriptures you really see nothing in the way of patricide, father-killing, whereas in contemporary Rome, for instance, they just can't get enough of it.
So this has a way of solidifying the family,
but mostly it has a way of commemorating the deliverance of the people of Israel from Egypt where they would have been,
you know, exiled for a time and forced into heavy slavery and, you know,
their national identity threatened until such
time as they were delivered from Egypt and brought into the promised land. So that's like
the first sense there of redemption, buying back as it were the firstborn with the recognition that
it pertains by right to God but that God entrusts it to the family. So I don't know all the history
of this right or the full kind of of sociological or cultural implications of it.
And in that sense, my disputant, my interlocutor might have a point in that she was insisting that as a man, our Lord needed to be redeemed.
So in a certain sense, as an Israelite, this was part of their national or their kind of cultural inheritance so it was fitting and just that it be practiced as it were in the case of our Lord Jesus Christ because it
serves the cult, it serves the nation, it serves the family or the Father's house
which pertains to the clan which pertains to the tribe. Okay, so in that sense. But
on the other hand, Jesus didn't need it even if we're just operating at this
first level of the Old Testament right. Why? Well because Jesus didn't need it, even if we're just operating at this first level of the Old Testament right.
Why?
Well, because Jesus didn't need to do anything in the flesh.
The second, I mean the Son, the Word, did not need to take human flesh in order to save
us from our sins.
I mean, he just didn't need to take human flesh, period.
And in choosing to save us from our sins, again, he didn't need to take human flesh.
We can give arguments as to why it's very fitting that he did, why it's wonderful that
he did, why we're so happy that he did, but we can't say that it's
necessary. We can't say that he had to, or that he had need of it. So too, the way
that the redemption rite is described, it says, for all those who open the womb of
the mother, okay? So I think that's the technical language used, not necessarily
firstborn, although there was maybe just a Hebraism for firstborn. And in the case
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
we know that Our Lady is a virgin before, during, and after the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ.
So he doesn't open her womb in the biological sense of it,
I mean in the metaphorical sense of it, insofar as she is truly his mother, the mother of God,
and insofar as he is truly her son, son of Mary, then he is her firstborn, he opens a room,
but there's also something about this birth which is spectacular, and as a result of which,
I don't know that it would observe all of the rules which are laid down or prescribed by the people of Israel.
I don't want to get, what, Supercessionist or Marcionite and distance our Lord too much from his Jewish heritage,
but we also have to recognize the fact that he doesn't have to do these things.
Okay, so we want to be a little looser with our sense of
necessity.
Also, when you think about the point of these rites, the point is to solidify
Israel's identity as Israel and to solidify their relationship to God. Our Lord knows these things
to the marrow of his bones. And so far as he's God, and so far as he has perfect human knowledge in these different registers which St. Thomas describes,
so his identity and his mission, as it were, are totally clear.
So then we can come back to the fact that it's fitting that he submit to it.
And St. Thomas does dedicate a question to our Lord's submitting to the old law.
I think he speaks specifically about the case of circumcision. So it's good, yeah. And in
submitting to it, he fulfills it. He gives us an example of obedience, of
submission, and he also fulfills the law and passes us into the next stage,
or the fullness of the revelation, the covenant, which he makes in his blood.
Okay, so that's the first sense of redemption. The second sense of redemption would be more the sense of
Jesus redeeming us, the people of God, the Church, by his blood, by his passion,
death, and resurrection. So what do we mean here? Well, in our first sense of
redemption we talked about a kind of purchase or a kind of buying back. So that's what we mean when we talk about
redemption. Sometimes you'll hear people, especially in the early church, talk
about a kind of ransom and that'd be the language that's used at a couple of
places in the New Testament. A most prominent place is I think Mark 1045
right after the healing of the blind Bartimaeus and right before transitioning
into the time in Jerusalem
at Mark 11.1, something like that.
So that he gave himself as a ransom for our sins.
And the idea here is that our Lord Himself is the price.
Okay, so we sinned, and in sinning,
we incurred the punishment that goes with sin.
So there's the fault of sin, for one,
the relationships which are wounded in the way that that registers in our humanity,
and then there's the punishment attached to sin, the temporal and eternal
punishment that needs to be worked through in order for our minds and
hearts to be rectified, in order for our relationships to be reconciled, and then
there's also the servitude that comes with that. So when you do a certain
thing you become its slaves. So we seek to be slaves of our Lord Jesus Christ and of our Blessed
Mother. But when you choose sin and vice and all that goes with it you become in
turn a slave of sin, vice, death, the devil, etc. Now some of these theories get kind
of intense where you talk about it as if like the devil had to be paid back by
God. Nope, we're not talking about that. It wasn't necessary again that our
Lord save us in this way and the devil only has power over us insofar as it is
conceded to him by God so as to test us in virtue and to grow us ultimately in
the life of grace. So it all happens within the bounds of his providence. But
God chooses as it were to pay a price which he himself sets, so as to reveal
the fullness of his justice and to justify us in the process.
And in doing so, we can see the fittingness of it again,
because he reveals a richer justice and a richer mercy
than would have been the case had he simply pardoned
our sin without himself taking human flesh,
suffering, dying, rising from the dead. Because in that manifest and communicable witness we see how much God
loves us. I mean we see God, period. We see how much God loves us, we see how
dignified is our human state, we see that the wages of sin are indeed death, that
we have killed God, we've committed the most atrocious crime, and yet by virtue
of the charity which informs his decision to come in pursuit of us,
he can transform it into not merely an occasion, but a wellspring of grace, virtue, gifts of the Holy Spirit to draw us back into the divine life.
So, we can appreciate the fact that in upholding the order of justice in this way, by insisting on a punishment,
by himself undergoing the punishment, and delivering us from the servitude to sin, death, and the't need to do this, okay?
So, he didn't need to do this and he didn't himself need to be redeemed.
And that's a very important point.
So, there's like that song a while ago,
What if God were one of us just a slot in a pot?
And Jesus said,
What if God were one of us just a slot in a pot?
And Jesus said,
What if God were one of us just a slot in a pot?
And Jesus said,
What if God were one of us just a slot in a pot?
And Jesus said, What if God were one of us just a slot in a pot? Okay, so he didn't need to do this and he didn't himself need to be redeemed.
And that's a very important point. So there's like that song a while ago, what if God were one of us just a slob like one of us. So God does become like one of us,
but he doesn't become a slob like one of us. So our Lord assumes certain defects which are
associated with our human sin, like hunger or thirst or pain, suffering, ultimately death.
hunger or thirst or pain, suffering, ultimately death, but he doesn't assume certain defects which would actually impede the advance of his campaign of
salvation. So our Lord doesn't assume the defect of sin, he doesn't assume the
defect of ignorance. He came to illumine us, right? Not to be himself obscured with
us. And with sin, like, it just doesn't comport with God for sin to be in him
because sin is any thought, word, or deed contrary to the eternal law. He is the eternal law. And also, he sees God. He
looks on God face to face throughout the course of his earthly life, so he can't turn away from that
vision. And so too, he has the fullness of knowledge and grace which conducts him through the whole
course of this earthly life without sin, without fault, without defect. Okay, so our
Lord assumes certain defects which kind of solidify his solidarity with us as
human beings, which give us a handhold in his humanity so as ultimately to be
conducted into his divinity, but he doesn't assume certain defects which I
said again would impede his manifestation and communication of salvation. So he's
in solidarity with us in every imaginable way except for those ways
which conflict with his ultimate purpose which is to save.
So our Lord is not lost with the lost, he came to seek and to save the lost.
And so our Lord doesn't need to be redeemed, he himself doesn't need to be
saved even in his humanity. And that's in part the significance of
the fact that you know
his conception is miraculous and that from the moment of his conception he
enjoys every imaginable gift bestowed upon his human nature including a
quasi-infinite grace which is capable of positing acts of an infinite merit or
of an infinite sword of merit. Okay, so what we're dealing with here in our Lord Jesus Christ is something distinct.
And in this order, He doesn't need to be redeemed.
And insofar as the Old Covenant corresponds to the New Covenant,
anticipates the New Covenant, and is fulfilled by the New Covenant,
there is an interphase point between them.
So, one of my interlocutors points was that in the Old Testament you have a different anthropology.
Well, the Jews may have understood redemption in a different way than we currently understand
redemption when talking about Christian soteriology, but our Lord chooses to fill
that Old Testament reality with a New Testament perfection. So there has to
there is an interface point and there just is one anthropology. And then
anthropology is human nature, okay? So we have different approaches to it, but
there's just there's one human nature, various expressions, but is human nature, okay? So we have different approaches to it, but there's just one human nature, various expressions,
but one human nature insofar as Romans 5, 12 through 21, what's lost in Adam is reclaimed in our Lord Jesus Christ,
but how much more indeed?
So there has to be that common anthropology if salvation is to have any currency.
I think that's the point which ultimately merits redress.
So, Jesus did not mean to be redeemed. any currency. I think that's the point which ultimately merits redress. So Jesus
did not mean to be redeemed. I want to concede a couple of those points
insofar as there's like an Old Testament sense in which it's fitting that He
undergo this rite and that it's fitting that He Himself conduct this whole
process of redemption on our behalf even though neither of them are necessary in
the strict sense because of our Lord's desire to express solidarity with us
as a way to commend salvation so that we can recognize it and ultimately receive it because
He's awesome. So yeah, just another little insight into how very abundantly the Lord loves us and how
He makes that love known to us and in turn lovable for us, which is great. So that is what I wanted to share.
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