In
Jesus’ passion and death, we see the suffering of the world, past and present. Our
faith tells us that in our own suffering and death, which leads to the tomb, we will one day wake with Him in everlasting
life.
If anything, this walk with Christ during these days of sorrow, must reveal to us- and to a world that will listen- His infinite love for us. To paraphrase the refrain after each Station of the Cross: We adore You, O Christ, and we bless You, because You love us”.
"As Christ died on the cross He drew all those to Himself who would die His death and enter with Him into the mysterious glory of it, all those who by dying would redeem other men: those whose lives seem to be failures, to be cut off before they have come to their flowering; those people who could have had brilliant careers, who could have benefited their fellow men immeasurably, but are cut off at the very beginning of manhood, or who die in childhood; deaths that seem to be nothing else but waste to which we cannot reconcile our hearts.
He identifies Himself with all the young men who would die in battle, all the men and women who would fall in the squander of destruction that is war, all those children who would die in innocence with the burning splendor of His purity still radiant in their souls, with His passion of love still whole and not frittered away.
He identifies Himself with the old people who, when death comes, will think their lives were wasted, who will think that they have done nothing for God’s glory, taken no part in the world’s redemption, but who in reality are dying His death and saving the world in the power of His love.
Christ on the cross is God and man, He is wholly human; He knows the utter desolation and loneliness of death as no other man will ever know it. He knows the grief of leaving those whom He loves – His mother, His friends, Mary Magdalen who seems utterly dependent on Him.
He feels abandoned by His Father.
He is dying all our deaths. Death is too big a thing for any one of us to face alone. It separates us, for a time, from those we love on Earth. It is difficult for us Earthbound, rooted creatures to want Heaven; it is impossible for us to realize what the glory of God will be to us. It is loving God, and that only, that can make Heaven, Heaven. Here imagination does not help us: we cannot really imagine ourselves loving the “Supreme Spirit” – we even want to cling to our human frailties and comforts, to our human weakness
It is now that Christ takes over. He has died all our deaths on the cross; now we are going to die His; it is Christ in us who surrenders to God. It is not with our own heart and our own will that we can long for God, but with Christ’s. And Christ has given His heart and will to us. In this is the supreme mercy that comes to us in the hour of death.
“Father, into thy hands….” We can say it with Christ’s love and trust in the Father. “Father, into thy hands not only my spirit, my body and soul, but those people whom I love, and whom you love infinitely more than I
Now I love God with Christ’s will, with Christ’s heart, with Christ’s trust; and because He has taken whole possession of me, in the hour of my death I shall at last love my friends too with His loveNot only will my suffering of mind and body, molten into His in the fire of His love, be the beginning of my blessed purgatory purifying me; it will also be Christ’s sacrifice on the cross offered for those whom I love.
Of each one surrendered wholly to Christ in the hour of death, we can say: “Greater love than this no man has, that he lays down his life for his friends.” (Caryll Houselander)
Art: Gianpaolo Berto- Italian






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