MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?

0
38

 

It was written  by David, and later spoken by  Jesus. Yet  this  anguished prayer  has a universal appeal. Each one of us, at some point of  time, had experienced a  feeling  of being forsaken by God.  Of course, God in his abundant kindness, responded to our  appeals and  the  proof is that we are still alive. Like St Faustina, we also acknowledge God’s help in times of adversity  saying; ‘I would have died if the omnipotence of God had not supported me.’

St Faustina got that  divine help in time. We too often get it. But there was a man whose prayer for  help was  not answered. It was Jesus and this makes him unique in the sense that  in spite of being so dear to the Father, his  prayer was not heard.

There is a reason for it and  unfortunately  it is something we  forget even while meditating on his passion. It is because, even in our  wildest dreams, it is difficult or rather impossible to  imagine the  sufferings of Jesus. Often we  give more  weight to his physical suffering and  the devil is happy seeing  us concentrate on it  instead of  what he suffered in spirit. The poignancy of “I am  deeply grieved, even to death’ (Mk 14:34) tells it all.

Jesus embraced death on the cross, but much before it, he was  deeply suffering in  spirit. Anyone who meditates on the spiritual suffering of  Jesus would become saints, and those saints who continue meditating become  better saints.  In St Bernard’s words,  there is no better way to  heal  our conscience, purify our spirit, and to  take it to  the realms of perfection  than   a continuous meditation  of  our Lord’s passion.

Thomas a Kempis, who gave us many a  a practical lesson to follow the Lord wrote; ‘A religious person that exercises himself  seriously and  devoutly in the most holy life and passion of our Lord shall there abundantly find whatsoever necessary and profitable for him; neither shall he  need to seek any better thing out of Jesus’ (Imitation of Christ, Book I, chapter 25).

 Saints are unanimous in acknowledging the role of  meditating  on the passion of our Lord in our spiritual growth. What they propose is not the ritual  remembrance of  his physical sufferings, but a  deeper  journey  into what Jesus  suffered in   spirit. It  started in the garden of olives, where he was  left alone to   have a  taste of what  the burden of  the collective sins of humanity would be. It was  beyond human understanding, but Jesus was an ordinary human  being like any of us at the time of  his passion.

In fact it was  this spiritual suffering  that  brought us salvation. Because sin is  a disease  affecting the soul and  the remedy also should be a  spiritual one.  Jesus suffered the pain, the anguish, the  forlornness,  and the separation from God that a sinner is destined to accept. He liberated us from the punishment of sin not by  excusing it, but by  paying for it. 

It is impossible for man to  describe the  sufferings of Jesus that  started at Gethsemane and   ended in  Calvary, because no human being  presently on earth has ever experienced it and those who lived here  before us will never return to  tell us about its  severity. During those three hours in  cross, what Jesus experienced was exactly the same punishment that a person dying in sin would have to  undergo for all eternity. When the prophet  wrote about the punishment that  the suffering servant would undergo to make us whole (Isa 53:5) or he bearing the iniquities and sins of many (Isa 53:11-12)  he was  seeing the crucified  Jesus  going through unimaginable  sufferings on cross for the sake of all humanity.

The biggest punishment in heaven is the   knowledge that   a soul is  separated from God forever. It was this  pain that  Jesus – who was  one with the Father-  endured for  us. This punishment that lasted three hours was   voluntarily accepted  by Jesus     for  the entire humanity  from Adam to the last man on earth.  He suffered in spirit, because his  union with   the Father was spiritual. In other words, the price Jesus  paid for us was spiritual, and  his  physical  suffering was  just complementary to it.

This is why we are  encouraged to contemplate on his  spiritual passion.  Many  saintly persons  like St Bridget of Sweden, St Hildegard of Bingen, Saint Therese of  Lisieux, St Catherine of Sienna, and Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich were allowed to  have a glimpse of  what Jesus suffered in spirit.

This holy week, may our  spiritual life be centred around the meditation of the passion of our  Lord Jesus Christ. Departing from the usual  practice of ritually enumerating   what he suffered in body, may this  Easter be the culmination of a  fruitful week spent  in mediating  on  our Lord’s spiritual  passion rather than his  physical suffering.  For ‘it is the spirit that  gives life; the flesh is useless’ (Jn 6:63).

When  Jesus uttered ‘ El El lema sabachthani?’ (Mt  27:46) the bystanders understood it as  an appeal for help from Elijah (Mt 27:46). It is  natural  for us  to  assess everything in a human way and this is why we give more importance to  the physical part of Jesus’ suffering.  The one who understood the  true meaning of Jesus’ appeal  was the  heavenly Father, who  left the  Son alone to fulfil His will. ‘It was the will of  the LORD to crush  him with pain’ (Isa 53:10).

This week let us  pray; ‘Thy will be done’,  and surrender  ourselves to become Lord’s instruments to  get his  will done  in this world by meditating on the  passion our Saviour  had undergone to  liberate us from  death.

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here