SOTD – The BIBLE says the age difference between!
The Scriptures tell us plainly that Christ was made to bear the weight of humanity’s sin — not as a symbolic gesture, but as a real and crushing burden He accepted out of love. Saint Paul expresses this with startling clarity: “For our sake, He made Him to be sin who knew no sin” (2 Cor 5:21). In other words, the Father allowed His Son to carry the full consequence of our rebellion, absorbing into Himself the cost of our brokenness.
Pope Benedict XVI once reflected on this mystery in his encyclical Deus Caritas Est, calling it — with deliberate boldness — a “turning of God against Himself.” Not because God is divided, but because love sometimes demands a depth of self-giving that looks almost like self-wounding. Christ steps into the very place where humanity has failed, offering perfect obedience in response to our disobedience. The Cross is not the result of God’s wrath unleashed on His Son; it is the result of divine love entering the darkest corners of human history, even the corners filled with betrayal, injustice, and hatred.
This love is not reserved only for the righteous or the grateful. Christ extends it even to His adversaries, fulfilling His own command: “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Mt 5:44). His sacrifice reveals a love powerful enough to reach those farthest away — the indifferent, the hostile, the spiritually numb. It is a love that does not wait for us to deserve it.
Yet today, this profound message struggles to be heard. We live in a world captivated by novelty, speed, and distraction — not so different from the Athenians who, as Acts recounts, “spent their time in nothing except telling or hearing something new” (Acts 17:21). Our modern version of this fixation shows up in endless