Friday, September 27 : Saint Peter Chrysologus
See how the prophet Jonah’s flight away from God (Jon 1,3) is transformed into a prophetic image, and what was described as a fatal shipwreck is turned into the sign of the Lord’s Resurrection. The very text of the story of Jonah clearly shows him to be a perfect image of our Savior. It is written that Jonah “fled from before the face of God.” And did not our Lord himself flee from the condition and appearance of the divine nature to assume the condition and appearance of man? This is how the apostle Paul puts it: “Though he was divine he did not regard equality with God something to be grasped but emptied himself, taking the condition of a slave” (Phil 2,6-7). He who is Lord put on the condition of a slave; to go unrecognised in the world, to conquer the devil, he fled from himself within man… God is everywhere: it is impossible to flee from him. To “flee far away from the face of God” Christ hid himself, not spatially, but as it were through appearance – under the appearance of our slavery, which he wholly assumed. The text then continues: “Jonah went down to Joppa to escape to Tarshish.” This is the person who came down: “No one has gone up to heaven except the one who has come down from heaven” (Jn 3,13). Our Lord came down from heaven to earth; God came down to man; the almighty has come down to our servitude. But the Jonah who came down to the ship had to go up for the voyage; so too Christ, after coming down to this world, went up into the ship of the Church through his virtues and miracles.
maronite readings – rosary,team