If there had not been many dwelling places in the house of God the Father, our Lord would have told us that he was going on ahead to prepare the dwelling places of the saints. He knew, however, that many such dwelling places already prepared were awaiting the arrival of those who love God.
Therefore he did not give this as the reason for his departure, but rather his desire to open the way for our ascent to those heavenly places and to prepare a safe passage for us by making smooth the road that had previously been impassible. For heaven was then completely inaccessible to us—human foot had never trodden that pure and holy country of the angels.
It was Christ who first prepared the way for our ascent there. By
offering himself to God the Father as the firstfruits of all who are
dead and buried, he gave us a way of entry into heaven and was
himself the first human being the inhabitants of heaven ever saw.
The angels in heaven, knowing nothing of the sacred and profound
mystery of the incarnation, were astonished at his coming and almost
thrown into confusion by an event so strange and unheard of.
“Who is this coming from Edom?” they asked; that is,
from the earth.
But the Spirit did not leave the heavenly throng ignorant of the wonderful wisdom of God the Father. Commanding them to open the gates of heaven in honor of the King and Master of the universe, he cried out: “Lift up your gates, you princes, and be lifted up you everlasting doors, that the king of glory may come in.”
And so our Lord Jesus Christ has opened up for us a new and living way, as Paul says, “not by entering a sanctuary made with hands, but by entering heaven itself to appear before God on our behalf.” For Christ has not ascended in order to make his own appearance before God the Father. He was, is, and ever will be in the Father and in the sight of him from whom he receives his being, for he is his Father’s unfailing joy.
But now the Word, who had never before been clothed in human nature, has ascended as a man to show himself in a strange and unfamiliar fashion. And he has done this on our account and in our name, so that being like us, though with his power as the Son, and hearing the command, “Sit at my right hand,” as a member of our race, he might transmit to all of us the glory of being children of God.
For since he became man it is as one of us that he sits at the right hand of God the Father, even though he is above all creation and one in substance with his Father, having truly come forth from him as God from God and Light from Light.
As man then he appeared before the Father on our behalf, to enable
us whom original sin had excluded from his presence once more to see
the Father’s face. As the Son he took his seat to enable us as
sons and daughters through him to be called children of God.
So Paul, who claims to speak for Christ, teaching that the whole
human race has a share in the events of Christ’s life, says
that “God has raised us up with him and enthroned us with him
in heaven.”
To Christ as the Son by nature belongs the prerogative of sitting at
the Father’s side; this honor can rightly and truly be
ascribed to him alone.
Yet because his having become man means that he sits there as one
who is in all respects like ourselves, as well as being as we
believe God from God, in some mysterious way he passes this honor on
to us.
On John's Gospel 9: PG 74, 182-183
Cyril of Alexandria (d. 444) succeeded his uncle
Theophilus as patriarch in 412. Until 428 the pen of this
brilliant theologian was employed in exegesis and polemics against
the Arians; after that date it was devoted almost entirely to
refuting the Nestorian heresy. The teaching of Nestorius was
condemned in 431 by the Council of Ephesus at which Cyril
presided, and Mary’s title, Mother of God, was solemnly
recognized. The incarnation is central to Cyril’s theology.
Only if Christ is consubstantial with the Father and with us can
he save us, for the meeting ground between God and ourselves is
the flesh of Christ. Through our kinship with Christ, the Word
made flesh, we become children of God, and share in the filial
relation of the Son with the Father.
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Journey with the Fathers
Commentaries on the Sunday Gospels - Year C, pp. 60-61.
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