Felix Sanchez is a runner from
the Dominican Republic. At the London Olympics 2012, he won the gold medal in
the 400-meter hurdles. He did it with the memory of his late grandma on his
mind. The win was his second career gold at age 34, (in fact he is the oldest
gold medalist so far) and the Dominican Republic's first medal of the 2012
Games. He ran with a photo of the two of them pinned beneath his race bib. On
his yellow spikes he wrote "Abuela" - Spanish for "Grandmother."
Those shoes carried him to sure victory in 47.63
seconds. After reaching the finish line, he pulled out that picture, placed it
down on the track, knelt and tenderly kissed the image of the woman who raised
him.
Sánchez won the 400 hurdles at
the 2004 Athens Olympics. Four years later in Beijing, he woke up on the
morning of his preliminary round to the news that his grandmother had died. He
thought about dropping out but decided to run, and he wound up with the
22nd-fastest time of 25 finishers. "I ran terribly. I cried the whole
day" he recalled. "After that Olympics, I made a promise that I was
going to win a medal for her." And he did it with with style! He separated
himself from the pack down the stretch, so far ahead that he could start
celebrating early, sticking out his tongue as he crossed the line and letting
out a scream.
When he stepped atop the podium
for the medals ceremony, he became emotional while the national anthem of the
Dominican Republic was played and its flag raised. It also started to rain. He
later said: “It just made me feel like my grandmother was crying tears of joy.
She was proud of me."
Felix Sanchez trained for four long years to win this gold for his grandma. He had to struggle and deny himself so much for the sake of Olympic glory.
In today’s Gospel (Mk 8:27-35),
one of the things Jesus taught and stressed to his disciples was the idea of a
Suffering Messiah. He accepted Peter’s affirmation that he is indeed the
Messiah. But as Messiah, he will suffer and die. Moreover, his disciples must
also follow this way of the cross. “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny
himself, take up his cross, and follow me.” Jesus’ disciples, then must learn
to deny themselves.
There are 3 reasons why Jesus
insists on Self Denial
1.
It is
Necessary
Self denial is a part of life and
it involves self emptying. It requires a painful dying to one’s personal liking
after the example of Jesus. Though he was God, he emptied himself and took the
form of a slave. In the Holy Family Retreat House run by the Redemptorists in
Busay, Cebu, I came across a quotation which goes: “He who must give light must
endure burning.” For a candle to give light, it must die. It must burn and
spend itself until its last wax. Burning is its only way to give light.
Yesterday, we celebrated the
Feast of Our Lady of Sorrows. St. John in his gospel recounts that Mary was
standing at the foot of the cross. Her
presence there was an icon of faith and love. She had deep faith – despite the
great suffering and pain of Jesus she believed that the Father knows best! At
that moment she was an epitome of love. She certainly was crying but no anger
and hate in her heart. And looking up to heaven she would make a sigh of loving
offering of her most precious Son sharing his suffering for the salvation of
the world.
2.
It is a
Daily Process
Self denial involves a slow and
constant process. As it is said “nothing worthwhile comes easy.” So it is to be
configured to Christ. Michaelangelo was a great Italian renaissance artist. One
of his masterpieces is the Pieta, made of
Carrara marble which he sculpted for one year from 1498-1499. This famous
work of art depicts the body of Jesus on the lap of his mother Mary after his
crucifixion. To complete this work, the artist has to work patiently and slowly
to chip off the design from the big mass of marble. It is the only work
Michaelangelo signed because after its completion someone remarked that it was
the work of a rival sculptor. So he carved his name on the sash running across Mary’s
chest if only to point out the difficulty of creating such a classical work of
art only to be attributed to someone else. A sculptor, a painting even book
writing needs time, patience, discipline and a daily dose of love. Certainly love
is the deepest reason for self denial in view of a greater good.
3.
It is the
Path to Greatness
Athletes become champions only by
conquering themselves. They put in tremendous amount of effort, practice and
discipline to master their sport. Self denial is the main ingredient to
greatness in any endeavor. If the Airforce can say: no guts, no glory; the Marines
can say: no retreat, no surrender; the Army can say: no pain, no gain. The
Christian can also say: no cross, no resurrection!
Following Christ is a constant
challenge which requires faith and love expressed in our willingness to deny
ourselves. In the end, the Father will also shed loving tears of joy for us and
will be standing proud of us.
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