In
his own person and life, Jesus “hit rock bottom”, so to speak, in order to
define the outer limit of human anguish, loss and despair. We say ordinarily
that God is greater than all things. But do we ever consider the tremendous
implications of this statement? For it implies that, precisely because Jesus
was not only a human being but also God, no one can ever suffer greater
anguish, loss and despair than the Son of God did in his Passion and Death. Not
only that, but it further implies that God’s ever-greater suffering in Christ
occurred out of free and deliberate compassion for our own suffering. Therefore,
all of our pain and distress—of whatever kind and intensity—are already safely contained within the
Passion of our loving and merciful Lord before we even realize it, if we ever
do. We do not have to deposit our sufferings within Jesus’ own; that is where
Jesus himself has already deliberately installed our whole lives, excluding
nothing: at the very center of his Heart. We cannot ever suffer or rejoice
without Jesus suffering and rejoicing with us. Why? Because in his Paschal Mystery
the Son of God has re-created the world according to his Father’s design so as
to ensure that no one will be excluded from the operation of his creative
goodness and power, which transforms the whole cosmos into a luminous Temple of
vibrant divine Life.
But
in this process of glorious cosmic metamorphosis we are not idle pawns who are
simply moved about by God’s arbitrary will to save. Being living images of God
himself, we are invited time and again humbly to accept and joyously to embrace
God’s desire to redeem us, in such a way that we become active collaborators
with the Redeemer in his work of re-creating and re-structuring the universe
according to the pattern of God’s Kingdom—a Kingdom of truth, justice and
peace.
If
we wish to rise with Christ and experience fullness of eternal life, beginning
right now, we must exit the confinement of our egos and enter the real world
that God is continually creating all around us, recognizing that our true
freedom, spiritual health and unending joy lie precisely in inhabiting the
world of God’s overflowing beauty and grace. We cannot create such a world for
ourselves, even though each of us longs for it with all our heart and with the
deepest instincts of our whole being; and yet, neither can we be forced to enter
and live in such a world against our will or as long as we persevere in
attitudes of inaction, indifference or cynical doubt.
Photograph by Brother Brian. Reflection by Father Simeon.