Love Extravagant: Jesus on the Cross
By Curtis J. Mitch [social-share]

Teacher, which is the great commandment in the law?” And he said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the first and great commandment. And a second is like it, You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets. (Matt 22:36–40)In saying this, Jesus reveals the deepest intent of God’s law. Rabbinic tradition enumerated a total of 613 commandments in the Torah, a vast legislation that covered an array of conduct related to personal life, social life, religious life, etc. Despite this great diversity of laws, Jesus insists that the entire law serves a common aim: To teach God’s people how to love. Every commandment, every precept, is ordered in some way to loving God and loving neighbor. That’s the positive side. But there’s a negative implication as well. Jesus’s words also cast a sidelight on the mystery of sin. If every precept of God’s law calls us to love, then every sin against the law is a refusal to love, every transgression a failure to love. In short, this means that every sin creates a debt of love that is owed to God and others but is wrongly withheld. Human history, which in spiritual terms is a sorry tale of rebellion against the Lord and his law, is a story of men and women racking up a universe of debt. Woefully less love is given to God and neighbor than what is owed in justice. And in our fallen state, we simply don’t have enough love to make up for what is lacking. The principle balance of love’s debt is unpayable for sinners.3 This is why God sent his Son into the world: to fulfill a mission of love. Jesus came to do for us what we could not do for ourselves. He took to himself a human nature so that he could love the Father and the human family to the fullest extent possible as a man and thus pay the debts of love that your sins and mine have incurred. And Jesus was uniquely qualified for this task, first, because he himself was and remains sinless (without debts of his own), and second, because his human will was and remains the instrument of his divine will (which is infinitely powerful). As true man, Christ acted in our name and on our behalf; as true God, his actions were infinitely efficacious. Jesus, then, was the one man who could love to an infinite degree and thus satisfy the debt of love that our race incurred with God. Every refusal to love, which is the essence of every sin, received its full and just compensation from the Son of God, who loved God and neighbor like no one else could. In fact, because Jesus loved with an infinite love, he satisfied our debts superabundantly (Rom 5:20–21). He not only paid what we owed, bringing us back to ground zero, so to speak, but he has made us spiritually rich (2 Cor 8:9). How, then, does one explain the violence of the crucifixion? According to classical Catholicism, it is not the violence of an angry Father hammering down on the Son that is on display. It is rather the full intensity of Christ’s love—the heroism of enduring even the very worst for one’s beloved—that is revealed in these awful circumstances. Jesus was paying our debts by fulfilling the Torah’s double commandment of charity—loving the Father in a perfect act of obedience and loving us in a perfect act of service intended for our eternal benefit. His love is perfect because it’s perfectly selfless. A love that ends in death, especially an excruciating one, is purest because it neither seeks nor expects anything in return. It is sheer giving without any thought of getting. This is precisely where the accent falls in the teaching of the New Testament. One could say that Jesus himself gave us a golden key when he said at the Last Supper: “Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13). With these words Jesus was preparing his followers to view his passion with the eyes of faith. When his hour comes, they must not be blinded by the evil that rages all around him; in the midst of the blood and brutality, they must see Jesus’s love reaching its greatest intensity, redeeming the world from the debts of its sin.4 What, then, was Jesus doing on the Cross? He was loving. He was substituting his obedience for our disobedience.5 He was loving God and neighbor vicariously (in our name, while acting in our nature) and superabundantly (compensating for our refusals to love, and even paying more than we owed in the first place). This is love extravagant. [hr] 1. Advocates of this interpretation claim to find support for this view in several passages of Scripture, e.g., Isa 53:4–6; 2 Cor 5:21; Gal 3:13. 2. I say “one” of the answers because Catholic saints and theologians have worked out several models for understanding how Jesus’s death makes satisfaction for sin. 3. This is one of the lessons of the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant in Matthew 18:23–35. 4. Other passages of the NT that accent the love of Christ on the Cross include Rom 5:8; Gal 2:20; Eph 5:2. 5. CCC 615.
