By Father
Paul A. Duffner, O.P.
It was not in the plan of God that suffering and death be
a part of human existence. That they became the lot of the
human race was not God’s doing, but man’s. God made man in
His own likeness and image, desiring to share with him His
own infinite happiness and goodness. He endowed man with
special gifts that made him immune from all suffering, and
free of the necessity of undergoing death. These gifts,
however, were not essential to human nature and could be
lost.
God endowed man with free-will, in order that man would
have to freely choose God above all things before entering
into the beatitude of heaven. But, as we know, it was man’s
free will that upset what God had planned, for our first
parents rebelled against the restriction placed on their
freedom, wishing to decide for themselves what they could do
or not do. As a result, they not only were not admitted into
heaven, but they lost for themselves and their descendants
those gifts that made them immune from suffering and death.
THE NEED OF REDEMPTION
Because of his sin Adam was utterly displeasing to God,
and because of the loss of grace he was unable to do
anything that would win God’s favor. God could have left
mankind in that helpless state of eternal separation from
Himself; or He could simply have pardoned man, restoring all
the gifts he had lost. But God would accept neither of those
solutions.
In His mercy He sent His only begotten Son to become a
member of the human race to offer, on behalf of mankind, the
infinite reparation that divine justice demanded. The divine
Word took on a human body and soul in order that He could
suffer to pay the penalty that a just God demanded in
expiation for the sins of the world. Because He was man, He
could pay the debt on the part of the human race; and
because He was God, the reparation He offered was infinite.
WHY THE PASSION?
Christ could have offered sufficient reparation without
the Passion, for His every deliberate act was one of
infinite love, sufficient to redeem the whole of mankind.
But the Father willed the way of the Passion, the way of
suffering. St. Thomas Aquinas explains why: (III, 46,3)
(III, 48,1, ad 2)
1. The Passion made God’s love for us so much more
manifest, suffering so much on our behalf. "You have been
bought at a great price" (1 Cor. 6:20). "Greater love than
this no man has . . ." (Jn. 15:13). By His passion man is
stirred to love God in return, and in this love of God lies
man’s perfection.
2. It helps man to realize the enormous evil of sin, when
God would go to such length to make reparation for it.
3. It helps us to see more clearly the justice of God,
Who willed the death of His own Son to repair for sin; and
the mercy of God in the way He applies to sinners the merits
of Christ's sufferings.
4. It gives such a wonderful example of humility and
obedience, those indispensable virtues in loving God.
Through PRIDE and DISOBEDIENCE Adam refused God the love and
homage due Him. Through HUMILITY and OBEDIENCE Christ
offered His Father the love and submission due Him.
5. It shows clearly the immense love of Jesus for His
Father, Whom He obeyed "even to the death of the Cross"
(Phil. 2:8). When Christ went forth to the Passion, He told
the apostles that He did so "that the world may know that I
love the Father" (Jn.14:31). 6. The Passion of Christ was
especially valuable in teaching the necessity of suffering
if fallen man (having the use of reason) is to attain his
eternal salvation.
Additional scriptural passages clearly testify to the
need of the Passion in fulfillment of the divine plan:
"The Son of man must be lifted up, that whosoever
believes in Him may not perish, but have everlasting life" (Jn.
3:14).
"Shall I not drink the cup that the Father has given Me?"
(Jn. 18:11)
"Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and so
enter into His glory?" (Lk. 24:26)
To His disciples before the Ascension: "Recall those
words I spoke to you when I was still with you; everything
written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets and
the psalms had to be fulfilled . . . .Thus it is written
that the Messiah must suffer and rise again from the dead"
(Lk.24:44,46).
OUR SHARING IN THE REDEMPTION
By the sufferings in His human nature during the Passion
by which mankind was redeemed, Christ gave to all suffering
experienced in the members of His Mystical Body a redeeming
power when accepted and offered up in union with His
Passion. As Pope John Paul II wrote:
"In bringing about the Redemption through suffering,
Christ raised human suffering to the level of the
Redemption. Thus each man, in his sufferings, can also
become a sharer in the redemptive suffering of Christ" (Salvifici
Doloris).
Speaking on one occasion to a group of infirm persons
suffering from various illnesses and handicaps, the present
Holy Father recalled the great mercy of Christ in the many
times He miraculously cured the lame, the blind, the deaf,
the leprous, etc.; and how to save the newly-weds
embarrassment, He miraculously changed water into wine. But,
he said, there is here an even greater miracle, a greater
mercy - when He gives to human suffering a supernatural
value. All the miracles mentioned were changes on the purely
natural level; that is, the gift given in each miracle was
some benefit of the natural order. But when He transforms
human suffering giving it a supernatural value, a
supernatural power, that is a far greater gift, a far
greater miracle. But it is a gift so little appreciated, for
it is known only in the light of faith; and the faith of
many is weak. How many opportunities for spiritual growth
and for helping others are wasted in complaining about the
crosses of life.
FILLING UP WHAT IS LACKING
St. Paul was so filled with the idea of the redemptive
power of suffering that he exclaimed: "I find joy in the
sufferings I endure for you. In my own flesh I fill up what
is lacking in the sufferings of Christ for the sake of His
Body, the Church" (Col. 1:24).
Those words of St. Paul are a puzzle to some, for they
seem to imply that something is lacking in the Passion of
Christ. St. Paul is speaking here of the Mystical Body of
Christ, made up of Christ, the Head, and all souls in the
state of grace who are the members of His Body. It is in the
members of His Body that something is lacking. Shortly
before He died Christ exclaimed: "It is consummated!" He
says in effect: "All is accomplished that I came to do. By
My painful obedience to the Father I offered infinite
reparation for the sins of mankind, and merited the
restoration of grace for the whole human race." There is no
grace that comes to any human that was not merited by Him.
He had no need of any other in redeeming the human race. But
Jesus willed that the mystery of His Passion continue on in
us, so that we may be associated with Him in the work of
redemption. Jesus could have accomplished this alone, but He
willed to need us in order to apply the infinite merits of
His Passion to souls. Pope Pius XII spoke of this in his
encyclical on the Mystical Body:
"In carrying out the work of redemption Christ wishes to
be helped by the members of His Body. This is not because He
is indigent or weak, but rather because He so willed it for
the greater glory of His spotless Spouse. Dying on the
Cross, He left to the Church the immense treasury of the
Redemption. Towards this she (the Church) contributed
nothing. But when those graces come to be distributed, not
only does He share this task of sanctification with His
Church, but he wants it, in a way, to be due to her action.
What a deep mystery . . . that the salvation of many depends
on the prayers and voluntary penances which the members of
the Mystical Body offer for that intention, and on the
assistance of pastors of souls and of the faithful,
especially fathers and mothers of families, which they must
offer to our divine Savior as though they were His
associates."
Think of it. By accepting willingly and without complaint
the little inconveniences, irritations, frustrations,
delays, setbacks, etc. which God in His Providence allows to
come our way, we can pay in part the debt that we, or
others, have incurred by our sins. Because God is just, He
demands that the debt of suffering be paid,, but because He
is merciful, He allows one person to "fill up what is
lacking" in another member of the Mystical Body which is the
Church. As St. Thomas Aquinas says, "by the cooperation of
Christ's satisfaction, much lighter penalty suffices than
one that is proportionate to the sin" (III, 49,3, ad 2).
EMBRACE THE CROSS
The Cross was the instrument chosen by God for the
redemption of mankind. That is why Our Savior refers to the
hardships and fatigue and trials of daily life as the
"cross" that we must embrace if we are to be His disciples.
Accepting them in union with the passion of Christ gives
them a redeeming power, a redeeming value, a share in the
fruits of His Passion. The "cross" can include everything
that goes against the grain, and that can be an endless
list. To mention a few examples: physical pain, mental
anguish, disappointments, depression, humiliations, delays,
sickness, poverty, set-backs in business, loneliness, being
misunderstood or falsely accused, hardships and fatigue of
daily routine, sadness at death of family member or friend,
the difficult sacrifices in fulfilling God’s commandments
and the duties in our state in life, etc. All these entail
suffering, and are part of the penalty of sin of our fallen
nature.
We naturally try to eliminate all forms of suffering from
our life, but insofar as they are beyond our power to
control, they are part of God’s providence. God foresees
them, allows them, and can bring good out of them if we
trust in Him. Suffering in some form or other is the lot of
every human, saint as well as sinner. But since our attitude
toward them can make them profitable or unprofitable (even
increase our misery), it is important to see them in the
light of the Gospel, in the light of God’s providence. That
is because suffering can get one down, or it can bring one
closer to God. It can make one resentful and bitter - even
blaming God for his lot, or it can make one more conscious
of God’s providence at work. It can make one turn in on
himself in self-pity, or it can help one to open out upon
the world in apostolic and redemptive action.
That suffering is not something good in itself, is clear
from the great number of Christian institutions (hospitals,
sanitariums, etc.) established to alleviate human suffering.
While the ills and hardships and setbacks of life can be
instrumental in spiritual growth, in themselves they are
something evil. Christians are not forbidden to seek the
comforts of life, or to enjoy lawful amusements, or to seek
remedies from pain. The Church does not glorify suffering
for its own sake; but it does glorify God by the loving
acceptance of suffering when the fulfillment of His will
entails it.
TESTIMONY OF THE POPE
We have already mentioned the Holy Father’s frequent
comments on the salvific value of suffering when addressing
the sick and disabled. He wrote at length on that topic in
his Apostolic Letter "Salvifici Doloris" in which he
remarked:
"Christ does not speak in the abstract . . . . He says:
"FOLLOW ME! Come! Take part through your suffering in this
work of saving the world, a salvation achieved through My
suffering . . . through My Cross. . . ."
"Without the vision of faith one has a sense of the
uselessness of suffering.
This feeling not only consumes the person interiorly, but
makes him feel a burden to others . . . and useless to
himself. The discovery of the salvific meaning of suffering
in union with Christ transforms this depressing feeling.
Faith in sharing the suffering of Christ brings with it the
interior certainty the suffering person 'completes what is
lacking in Christ’s afflictions'; the certainty that in the
spiritual dimension of the work of revelation he is serving,
like Christ, the salvation of his brothers and sisters.
Therefore he is carrying out an irreplaceable service."
MARY’S ROLE
In the divine plan Mary was destined to share in a unique
way in the redemptive mission of her Son, and therefore in
His suffering. She received an early confirmation of this at
the words of Simeon that a sword of sorrow would pierce her
heart. On Calvary Mary’s suffering, beside the suffering of
Jesus, reached an intensity which can hardly be imagined
from a human point of view, but which was supernaturally
fruitful for the redemption of the world. As the application
of the fruits of the redemption will continue until the end
of the world, so will the unique role of Mary in the
distribution of those graces. Pope John Paul II speaks of
this in relation to the Immaculate Heart of the Mother of
God:
"The Divine Redeemer wishes to penetrate the soul of
every sufferer through the heart of His holy Mother, the
first and most exalted of all the redeemed. As though by a
continuation of that motherhood which by the power of the
Holy Spirit had given Him life, the dying Christ conferred
upon the ever Virgin Mary a new kind of motherhood -
spiritual and universal - towards all human beings, so that
every individual, during the pilgrimage of faith, might
remain together with her, closely united to Him unto the
Cross, and so that every form of suffering, given fresh life
by the power of the Cross, should become no longer the
weakness of man but the power of the Cross" (ibid.).
NOT MY WILL . . .
In spite of Jesus’ willing acceptance of the Passion, and
His insistence that His followers must embrace the "crosses"
of life, His human nature shrank from pain just as ours
does. We see that in the Garden of Gethsemani; yet He
willingly accepted it when commanded by His heavenly Father.
"I seek not my own will, but the will of Him who sent Me"
(Jn.5:30). The same should be the goal of His followers.
Those sincerely seeking to grow closer to Christ know that
it must be by way of the cross. Each day brings many little
opportunities to submit willingly to various kinds of
self-giving that go against the grain. Like Christ, we too
can pray in certain painful situations, "let this chalice
pass from me" as long as we are willing to add
"nevertheless, not my will but yours be done" (Lk. 22:42).
See
REDEMPTIVE SUFFERING