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The lesson portrays the Servant who suffers for us, the Messiah on the cross, as undesirable in appearance and disfigured (52:14-15; 53:2). Yet Pope Benedict XVI has reminded us that on the cross, despite its apparent ugliness, we see the future of humankind! For on the cross, in the wounds Jesus endured and through the opening of his flesh, all the walls and personal privacy that divide us are torn down as his blood flows on us and becomes our own. The wounds Jesus bears open him and us up -- to each other. His outstretched arms on the cross welcome us all into him. His embrace of us on the cross represents the future of all humankind -- a life lived for others, not for ourselves, a life no longer lived in isolation but in mutual embrace. If we want to know where we are going as human beings, the Servant on the cross shows us (Introduction to Christianity, pp. 239-240).

