"This is the worst fall of all. It comes at the worst moment of all. It tears open all the wounds in his body; the shock dispels the last ounce of strength that he had mustered to go on. It shatters the last hope, the last remnant of faith, in nearly everyone in the crowd. It is triumph for his enemies, heartbreak for his friends.
The effect on the crowd is terrible. From having been an object of compassion, of admiration, he has become an object of contempt. Hope has given way to despair, struggling faith to bitterness and derision: “He has saved others, himself he cannot save!”
Now Christ gets up, he does not turn his head, he does not heed the disappointment of the crowd. He gets up, weaker than he has ever been, almost too exhausted to go on, all the old wounds open and bleeding; more abject than he has ever been, a greater disappointment to his followers than he has ever been, in their eyes a complete failure. He gets up and goes on; lays his beautiful hands, those hands of a carpenter, on the wood of the cross for the last time, and without looking round begins the ascent to the summit of Calvary.
The last fall is the worst fall. In it Christ identified himself with those who fall again and again, and who get up again and again and go on – those who even after the struggle of a lifetime fall when the end is in sight; those who in this last fall lose the respect of many of their fellow men, but who overcome their humiliation and shame; who, ridiculous in the eyes of men, are beautiful in the eyes of God, because in Christ, with Christ’s courage, in his heroism, they get up and go on, climbing the hill of Calvary.
In the third fall, the showing of Christ’s love is this: He does not indwell only the virtuous, only those who are successful in overcoming temptation, only those who are strong and in whom his power is made manifest to the world; he chooses to indwell those who seem to fail, those who fall again and again, those who seem to be overcome even when the end is in sight. In them, if they will it, he abides; in them he overcomes weakness and failure, in them he triumphs; and in his power they can persevere to the end, abject before men but glorious with Christ’s glory before God." (Caryll Houselander)
Art: Jan Toroop (d. 1928) Dutch





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