CHRISTIAN MORAL PRINCIPLES
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Chapter 19: Fulfillment in Jesus and Human Fulfillment
Question B: How is the fullness of the Lord Jesus related to God’s purpose in creating?
1. The revelation of the mystery of the fullness of Jesus clarifies how God is actually bringing about the communication of his goodness which is his purpose in creating: the plan “to unite all things in him [Christ], things in heaven and things on earth” (Eph 1.10). God’s glory, the self-manifestation which he wills, is not merely comprised of many different creatures; the whole has unity, the unity of the Lord Jesus. All else will find its proper place in Jesus’ fullness.4 Since he is both God and man, the fulfillment of all things in him unites God’s uncreated perfection with his created glory. The remainder of this question considers the complex reality of the fulfillment of everything in Jesus from several points of view.
In the Old Testament it is frequently said that God fills the earth, Jerusalem, and the temple. Without becoming mixed with his creation, God’s glory, name, and presence fill and fulfill his creatures. With the Incarnation, God is present in a new way: “For in him [Christ] the whole fulness of deity dwells bodily” (Col 2.9). Jesus holds the first place in God’s plan (see Col 1.15–20). Because he is both God and man, the Lord Jesus can integrate all of reality (see AG 3).
2. The good which God communicates in Jesus is himself. Insofar as he is God, Jesus unites his fellow human beings with the Father: “The glory which you have given me I have given to them, that they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one” (Jn 17.22–23; cf. S.t., 1, q. 43, aa. 1–3, 6). Insofar as he is man, Jesus achieves his human fulfillment by living a perfect human life in which God’s goodness is manifested in a unique way: “I glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work which you gave me to do” (Jn 17.4). God crowns Jesus’ holy life with its creaturely fulfillment by raising Jesus from the dead (see 1 Cor 15.20–28; Heb 4.5–10).
3. Insofar as he is God, Jesus communicates to us a share in his divine fullness (see Jn 1.16). Insofar as he is man, he is “the first-born of all creation” (Col 1.15) and is completed by creation united under his headship (see Eph 1.9–10, 22–23; LG 7).5 The whole reality of creator and creation thus comes to harmonious unity in the Lord Jesus; absolute fullness resides in him: “It pleased God to make absolute fullness reside in him and, by means of him, to reconcile everything in his person, both on earth and in the heavens making peace through the blood of his cross” (Col 1.19–20; NAB).6
4. Those who love God find their own fulfillment in the fellowship of everlasting life in Jesus. Everlasting life includes both a share in his divinity and in the creaturely fulfillment of his resurrection. Everlasting life is the ultimate end of human persons. Christians share by baptism in Jesus’ divinity and by the Eucharist in his resurrection life. Hence, although the everlasting life of Christians will be perfected later, they begin to attain their ultimate end even now (see Jn 1.12–13; 3.5; 6.47, 54; Rom 8.14–19; Eph 2.6–7; Col 1.9–23; 3.1–4; 1 Jn 3.1–2).7
5. Jesus’ fullness extends through the blessed to all things: “For all things are yours . . and you are Christ’s; and Christ is God’s” (1 Cor 3.21, 23). Christ’s fullness extends not only to humankind but also to the rest of creation. Because the world is “intimately related to man and achieves its purpose through him” (LG 48), it will share in human fulfillment, for which it now waits (see Rom 8.19; cf. S.t., sup., q. 91, a. 1).
6. The fullness of deity present in Jesus will be communicated, “that God may be everything to every one” (1 Cor 15.28). Yet, contrary to a pantheist conception, the created reality of human beings and other creatures will not be swallowed up in God. Creatures will remain creatures. Created persons sharing in Jesus’ fullness will know their creator, not be absorbed by him (see 1 Cor 13.12). The heaven in which they will find fulfillment is a city, that is, a fellowship (see Heb 12.22–24).
Jesus entered the heavenly sanctuary, not with the blood of an animal sacrifice, “but his own blood, thus securing an eternal redemption” (Heb 9.12). By Jesus’ resurrection, the kingdom of God—the communion of truth and life, of justice, love, and peace—is established. Admission is free for the asking; one need only accept it as a child accepts a gift (see Mk 10.15; Lk 18.17). The only thing necessary is communion with Jesus (see Lk 10.38–42). The power to become children of God and to share in the fullness of life present in Jesus is given to believers in him (see Jn 1.10–16). “He who believes has eternal life” (Jn 6.47).