Sober
for Christ
S piritually O bedient B eatitude E ucharist R econciliation
APOSTOLIC
LETTER
SALVIFICI DOLORIS
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
JOHN PAUL II
TO THE BISHOPS, TO THE PRIESTS,
TO THE RELIGIOUS FAMILIES
AND TO THE FAITHFUL
OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
ON THE CHRISTIAN MEANING
OF HUMAN SUFFERING
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and dear
brothers and sisters in Christ,
I
INTRODUCTION
1. Declaring the power of salvific suffering,
the Apostle Paul says: "In my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church"(1).
These words seem to be found at the end of the
long road that winds through the suffering which forms part of the history of
man and which is illuminated by the Word of God. These words have as it were
the value of a final discovery, which is accompanied by joy. For this reason
2. The theme of suffering - precisely under the
aspect of this salvific meaning - seems to fit profoundly into the context of
the Holy Year of the Redemption as an extraordinary Jubilee of the Church. And
this circumstance too clearly favours the attention it deserves during this
period. Independently of this fact, it is a universal theme that accompanies
man at every point on earth: in a certain sense it co-exists with him in the
world, and thus demands to be constantly reconsidered. Even though Paul, in the
Letter to the Romans, wrote that "the whole creation has been groaning in
travail together until now"(3), even though man knows and is close to the
sufferings of the animal world, nevertheless what we express by the word
"suffering" seems to be particularly essential to the nature of
man. It is as deep as man himself, precisely because it manifests in its
own way that depth which is proper to man, and in its own way surpasses it.
Suffering seems to belong to man's transcendence: it is one of those points in
which man is in a certain sense "destined" to go beyond himself, and
he is called to this in a mysterious way.
3. The theme of suffering in a special way
demands to be faced in the context of the Holy Year of the Redemption, and this
is so, in the first place, because the Redemption was accomplished through
the Cross of Christ, that is, through his suffering. And at the same
time, during the Holy Year of the Redemption we recall the truth expressed in
the Encyclical Redemptor Hominis: in Christ "every man becomes the
way for the Church"(4). It can be said that man in a special fashion
becomes the way for the Church when suffering enters his life. This happens, as
we know, at different moments in life, it takes place in different ways, it
assumes different dimensions; nevertheless, in whatever form, suffering seems
to be, and is, almost inseparable from man's earthly existence.
Assuming then that throughout his earthly life
man walks in one manner or another on the long path of suffering, it is
precisely on this path that the Church at all times - and perhaps especially during
the Holy Year of the Redemption - should meet man. Born of the mystery of
Redemption in the Cross of Christ, the Church has to try to meet man in
a special way on the path of his suffering. In this meeting man "becomes
the way for the Church", and this way is one of the most important ones.
4. This is the origin also of the present
reflection, precisely in the Year of the Redemption: a meditation on suffering.
Human suffering evokes compassion; it also evokes respect, and in
its own way it intimidates. For in suffering is contained the greatness
of a specific mystery. This special respect for every form of human suffering
must be set at the beginning of what will be expressed here later by the
deepest need of the heart, and also by the deep imperative of faith. About
the theme of suffering these two reasons seem to draw particularly close to
each other and to become one: the need of the heart commands us to overcome
fear, and the imperative of faith—formulated, for example, in the words of
Saint Paul quoted at the beginning—provides the content, in the name of which
and by virtue of which we dare to touch what appears in every man so
intangible: for man, in his suffering, remains an intangible mystery.
II
THE
WORLD OF HUMAN SUFFERING
5. Even though in its subjective dimension, as a
personal fact contained within man's concrete and unrepeatable interior,
suffering seems almost inexpressible and not transferable, perhaps at the same
time nothing else requires as much as does suffering, in its "objective
reality", to be dealt with, meditated upon, and conceived as an
explicit problem; and that therefore basic questions be asked about it and the
answers sought. It is evident that it is not a question here merely of giving a
description of suffering. There are other criteria which go beyond the sphere
of description, and which we must introduce when we wish to penetrate the world
of human suffering.
Medicine, as
the science and also the art of healing, discovers in the vast field of human
sufferings the best known area, the one identified with greater
precision and relatively more counterbalanced by the methods of
"reaction" (that is, the methods of therapy). Nonetheless, this is
only one area. The field of human suffering is much wider, more varied, and
multi-dimensional. Man suffers in different ways, ways not always considered by
medicine, not even in its most advanced specializations. Suffering is
something which is still wider than sickness, more complex and at the
same time still more deeply rooted in humanity itself. A certain idea of this
problem comes to us from the distinction between physical suffering and moral
suffering. This distinction is based upon the double dimension of the human
being and indicates the bodily and spiritual element as the immediate or direct
subject of suffering. Insofar as the words "suffering" and
"pain", can, up to a certain degree, be used as synonyms, physical
suffering is present when "the body is hurting" in some way,
whereas moral suffering is "pain of the soul". In fact, it is a
question of pain of a spiritual nature, and not only of the
"psychological" dimension of pain which accompanies both moral and
physical suffering The vastness and the many forms of moral suffering are
certainly no less in number than the forms of physical suffering. But at the
same time, moral suffering seems as it were less identified and less reachable
by therapy.
6. Sacred Scripture is a great book about
suffering. Let us quote from the books of the Old Testament a few examples
of situations which bear the signs of suffering, and above all moral suffering:
the danger of death(5), the death of one's own children(6) and, especially, the
death of the firstborn and only son(7); and then too: the lack of offspring(8),
nostalgia for the homeland(9), persecution and hostility of the
environment(10), mockery and scorn of the one who suffers(11), loneliness and
abandonment(12); and again: the remorse of conscience(13), the difficulty of
understanding why the wicked prosper and the just suffer(14), the unfaithfulness
and ingratitude of friends and neighbours(15); and finally: the misfortunes of
one's own nation(16).
In treating the human person as a psychological
and physical "whole", the Old Testament often links
"moral" sufferings with the pain of specific parts of the body: the
bones(17), kidneys(18), liver(19), viscera(20), heart(21). In fact one cannot
deny that moral sufferings have a "physical" or somatic element, and
that they are often reflected in the state of the entire organism.
7. As we see from the examples quoted, we find
in Sacred Scripture an extensive list of variously painful situations for man.
This varied list certainly does not exhaust all that has been said and
constantly repeated on the theme of suffering by the book of the history of
man (this is rather an "unwritten book"), and even more by the
book of the history of humanity, read through the history of every human
individual.
It can be said that man suffers whenever he
experiences any kind of evil. In the vocabulary of the Old Testament,
suffering and evil are identified with each other. In fact, that vocabulary did
not have a specific word to indicate "suffering". Thus it defined as
" evil" everything that was suffering(22). Only the Greek language,
and together with it the New Testament (and the Greek translations of the Old
Testament), use the verb * = "I am affected by .... I experience a
feeling, I suffer"; and, thanks to this verb, suffering is no longer
directly identifiable with (objective) evil, but expresses a situation in which
man experiences evil and in doing so becomes the subject of suffering.
Suffering has indeed both a subjective and a passive character (from
"patior"). Even when man brings suffering on himself, when he is its
cause, this suffering remains something passive in its metaphysical essence.
This does not however mean that suffering in the
psychological sense is not marked by a specific "activity". This
is in fact that multiple and subjectively differentiated "activity"
of pain, sadness, disappointment, discouragement or even despair, according to
the intensity of the suffering subject and his or her specific sensitivity. In
the midst of what constitutes the psychological form of suffering there is
always an experience of evil, which causes the individual to suffer.
Thus the reality of suffering prompts the
question about the essence of evil: what is evil?
This questions seems, in a certain sense,
inseparable from the theme of suffering. The Christian response to it is
different, for example, from the one given by certain cultural and religious
traditions which hold that existence is an evil from which one needs to be
liberated. Christianity proclaims the essential good of existence and
the good of that which exists, acknowledges the goodness of the Creator and proclaims
the good of creatures. Man suffers on account of evil, which is a certain lack,
limitation or distortion of good. We could say that man suffers because of a
good in which he does not share, from which in a certain sense he is cut
off, or of which he has deprived himself. He particularly suffers when he a
ought"—in the normal order of things—to have a share in this good and does
not have it.
Thus, in the Christian view, the reality of
suffering is explained through evil, which always, in some way, refers to a
good.
8. In itself human suffering constitutes as it
were a specific "world" which exists together with man, which
appears in him and passes, and sometimes does not pass, but which consolidates
itself and becomes deeply rooted in him. This world of suffering, divided into
many, very many subjects, exists as it were "in dispersion". Every
individual, through personal suffering, constitutes not only a small part of
that a world", but at the same time" that world" is present in
him as a finite and unrepeatable entity. Parallel with this, however, is the
interhuman and social dimension. The world of suffering possesses as it were
its own solidarity. People who suffer become similar to one another
through the analogy of their situation, the trial of their destiny, or through
their need for understanding and care, and perhaps above all through the
persistent question of the meaning of suffering. Thus, although the world of
suffering exists "in dispersion", at the same time it contains within
itself a. singular challenge to communion and solidarity. We shall also
try to follow this appeal in the present reflection.
Considering the world of suffering in its
personal and at the same time collective meaning, one cannot fail to notice the
fact that this world, at some periods of time and in some eras of human
existence, as it were becomes particularly concentrated. This happens,
for example, in cases of natural disasters, epidemica, catastrophes, upheavals
and various social scourges: one thinks, for example, of a bad harvest and
connected with it - or with various other causes - the scourge of famine.
One thinks, finally, of war. I speak of this in
a particular way. I speak of the last two World Wars, the second of which
brought with it a much greater harvest of death and a much heavier burden of
human sufferings. The second half of our century, in its turn, brings
with it—as though in proportion to the mistakes and transgressions of
our contemporary civilization—such a horrible threat of nuclear war that we cannot
think of this period except in terms of an incomparable accumulation of
sufferings, even to the possible self-destruction of humanity. In this way,
that world of suffering which in brief has its subject in each human being,
seems in our age to be transformed—perhaps more than at any other moment—into a
special "world": the world which as never before has been transformed
by progress through man's work and, at the same time, is as never before in
danger because of man's mistakes and offences.
III
THE QUEST
FOR AN ANSWER
TO THE QUESTION OF THE MEANING
OF SUFFERING
9. Within each form of suffering endured by man,
and at the same time at the basis of the whole world of suffering, there
inevitably arises the question: why? It is a question about the cause, the
reason, and equally, about the purpose of suffering, and, in brief, a question
about its meaning. Not only does it accompany human suffering, but it seems
even to determine its human content, what makes suffering precisely human
suffering.
It is obvious that pain, especially physical
pain, is widespread in the animal world. But only the suffering human being
knows that he is suffering and wonders why; and he suffers in a humanly
speaking still deeper way if he does not find a satisfactory answer. This is a difficult
question, just as is a question closely akin to it, the question of evil.
Why does evil exist? Why is there evil in the world? When we put the question
in this way, we are always, at least to a certain extent, asking a question
about suffering too.
Both questions are difficult, when an individual
puts them to another individual, when people put them to other people, as also
when man puts them to God. For man does not put this question to the
world, even though it is from the world that suffering often comes to him, but
he puts it to God as the Creator and Lord of the world. And it is well known
that concerning this question there not only arise many frustrations and
conflicts in the relations of man with God, but it also happens that people reach
the point of actually denying God. For, whereas the existence of the
world opens as it were the eyes of the human soul to the existence of God, to
his wisdom, power and greatness, evil and suffering seem to obscure this image,
sometimes in a radical way, especially in the daily drama of so many cases of
undeserved suffering and of so many faults without proper punishment. So this
circumstance shows—perhaps more than any other—the importance of the
question of the meaning of suffering; it also shows how much care must be
taken both in dealing with the question itself and with all possible answers to
it.
10. Man can put this question to God with all
the emotion of his heart and with his mind full of dismay and anxiety; and God
expects the question and listens to it, as we see in the Revelation of the Old
Testament. In the Book of Job the question has found its most vivid expression.
The story of this just man, who without any
fault of his own is tried by innumerable sufferings, is well known. He loses
his possessions, his sons and daughters, and finally he himself is afflicted by
a grave sickness. In this horrible situation three old acquaintances come to
his house, and each one in his own way tries to convince him that since he has
been struck down by such varied and terrible sufferings, he must have done
something seriously wrong. For suffering—they say—always strikes a man as
punishment for a crime; it is sent by the absolutely just God and finds its
reason in the order of justice. It can be said that Job's old friends wish not
only to convince him of the moral justice of the evil, but in a certain
sense they attempt to justify to themselves the moral meaning of
suffering. In their eyes suffering can have a meaning only as a punishment for
sin, therefore only on the level of God's justice, who repays good with good
and evil with evil.
The point of reference in this case is the
doctrine expressed in other Old Testament writings which show us suffering as
punishment inflicted by God for human sins. The God of Revelation is the Lawgiver
and Judge to a degree that no temporal authority can see. For the God of
Revelation is first of all the Creator, from whom comes, together with
existence, the essential good of creation. Therefore, the conscious and free
violation of this good by man is not only a transgression of the law but at the
same time an offence against the Creator, who is the first Lawgiver. Such a
transgression has the character of sin, according to the exact meaning of this
word, namely the biblical and theological one. Corresponding to the moral
evil of sin is punishment, which guarantees the moral order in the same
transcendent sense in which this order is laid down by the will of the Creator
and Supreme Lawgiver. From this there also derives one of the fundamental
truths of religious faith, equally based upon Revelation, namely that God is a
just judge, who rewards good and punishes evil: "For thou art just in
all that thou hast done to us, and all thy works are true and thy ways
right, and all thy judgments are truth. Thou hast executed true judgments in
all that thou hast brought upon us... for in truth and justice thou hast
brought all this upon us because of our sins"(23).
The opinion expressed by Job's friends manifests
a conviction also found in the moral conscience of humanity: the objective
moral order demands punishment for transgression, sin and crime. From this
point of view, suffering appears as a "justified evil". The
conviction of those who explain suffering as a punishment for sin finds support
in the order of justice, and this corresponds to the conviction expressed by
one of Job's friends: "As I have seen, those who plough iniquity and sow
trouble reap the same"(24).
11. Job however challenges the truth of the
principle that identifies suffering with punishment for sin. And he does this
on the basis of his own opinion. For he is aware that he has not deserved such
punishment, and in fact he speaks of the good that he has done during his life.
In the end, God himself reproves Job's friends for their accusations and
recognizes that Job is not guilty. His suffering is the suffering of someone
who is innocent and it must be accepted as a mystery, which the individual is
unable to penetrate completely by his own intelligence.
The Book of Job does not violate the foundations
of the transcendent moral order, based upon justice, as they are set forth by
the whole of Revelation, in both the Old and the New Covenants. At the same
time, however, this Book shows with all firmness that the principles of this
order cannot be applied in an exclusive and superficial way. While it is true
that suffering has a meaning as punishment, when it is connected with a fault, it
is not true that all suffering is a consequence of a fault and has the
nature of a punishment. The figure of the just man Job is a special proof
of this in the Old Testament. Revelation, which is the word of God himself,
with complete frankness presents the problem of the suffering of an innocent
man: suffering without guilt. Job has not been punished, there was no reason
for inflicting a punishment on him, even if he has been subjected to a grievous
trial. From the introduction of the Book it is apparent that God permitted this
testing as a result of Satan's provocation. For Satan had challenged before the
Lord the righteousness of Job: "Does Job fear God for nought? ... Thou
hast blessed the work of his hands, and his possessions have increased in the
land. But put forth thy hand now, and touch all that he has, and he will curse
thee to thy face"(25). And if the Lord consents to test Job with
suffering, he does it to demonstrate the latter's righteousness. The
suffering has the nature of a test.
The Book of Job is not the last word on this
subject in Revelation. In a certain way it is a foretelling of the Passion of
Christ. But already in itself it is sufficient argument why the answer
to the question about the meaning of suffering is not to be unreservedly linked
to the moral order, based on justice alone. While such an answer has a
fundamental and transcendent reason and validity, at the same time it is seen
to be not only unsatisfactory in cases similar to the suffering of the just man
Job, but it even seems to trivialize and impoverish the concept of justice which
we encounter in Revelation.
12. The Book of Job poses in an extremely acute
way the question of the "why" of suffering; it also shows that
suffering strikes the innocent, but it does not yet give the solution to the
problem.
Already in the Old Testament we note an
orientation that begins to go beyond the concept according to which suffering
has a meaning only as a punishment for sin, insofar as it emphasizes at the
same time the educational value of suffering as a punishment. Thus in the
sufferings inflicted by God upon the Chosen People there is included an
invitation of his mercy, which corrects in order to lead to conversion:
"... these punishments were designed not to destroy but to discipline our
people"(26).
Thus the personal dimension of punishment is
affirmed. According to this dimension, punishment has a meaning not only
because it serves to repay the objective evil of the transgression with
another evil, but first and foremost because it creates the possibility of
rebuilding goodness in the subject who suffers.
This is an extremely important aspect of
suffering. It is profoundly rooted in the entire Revelation of the Old and
above all the New Covenant. Suffering must serve for conversion, that
is, for the rebuilding of goodness in the subject, who can recognize the
divine mercy in this call to repentance. The purpose of penance is to overcome
evil, which under different forms lies dormant in man. Its purpose is also to
strengthen goodness both in man himself and in his relationships with others
and especially with God.
13. But in order to perceive the true answer to
the "why" af suffering, we must look to the revelation of divine
love, the ultimate source of the meaning of everything that exists. Love is
also the richest source of the meaning of suffering, which always remains a mystery:
we are conscious of the insufficiency and inadequacy of our explanations.
Christ causes us to enter into the mystery and to discover the "why"
of suffering, as far as we are capable of grasping the sublimity of divine
love.
In order to discover the profound meaning of
suffering, following the revealed word of God, we must open ourselves wide to
the human subject in his manifold potentiality. We must above all accept the
light of Revelation not only insofar as it expresses the transcendent order of
justice but also insofar as it illuminates this order with Love, as the
definitive source of everything that exists. Love is: also the fullest source
of the answer to the question of the meaning of suffering. This answer has been
given by God to man in the Cross of Jesus Christ.
IV
JESUS
CHRIST
SUFFERING CONQUERED BY
LOVE
14. "For God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have
eternal life"(27). These words, spoken by Christ in his conversation with
Nicodemus, introduce us into the very heart of God's salvific work. They
also express the very essence of Christian soteriology, that is, of the
theology of salvation. Salvation means liberation from evil, and for this
reason it is closely bound up with the problem of suffering. According to the
words spoken to Nicodemus, God gives his Son to "the world" to free
man from evil, which bears within itself the definitive and absolute
perspective on suffering. At the same time, the very word "gives" ("gave")
indicates that this liberation must be achieved by the only-begotten Son
through his own suffering. And in this, love is manifested, the infinite love
both of that only-begotten Son and of the Father who for this reason
"gives" his Son. This is love for man, love for the
"world": it is salvific love.
We here find ourselves—and we must clearly
realize this in our shared reflection on this problem—faced with a completely
new dimension of our theme. It is a different dimension from the one which was
determined and, in a certain sense, concluded the search for the meaning of
suffering within the limit of justice. This is the dimension of Redemption, to
which in the Old Testament, at least in the Vulgate text, the words of the just
man Job already seem to refer: "For I know that my Redeemer lives, and at
last... I shall see God..."(28). Whereas our consideration has so far
concentrated primarily and in a certain sense exclusively on suffering in its
multiple temporal dimension (as also the sufferings of the just man Job), the
words quoted above from Jesus' conversation with Nicodemus refer to suffering
in its fundamental and definitive meaning. God gives his only-begotten Son
so that man "should not perish" and the meaning of these words "
should not perish" is precisely specified by the words that follow:
"but have eternal life".
Man " perishes" when he loses
"eternal life". The opposite of salvation is not, therefore, only
temporal suffering, any kind of suffering, but the definitive suffering: the
loss of eternal life, being rejected by God, damnation. The only-begotten Son
was given to humanity primarily to protect man against this definitive evil and
against definitive suffering. In his salvific mission, the Son must
therefore strike evil right at its transcendental roots from which it develops
in human history. These transcendental roots of evil are grounded in sin and
death: for they are at the basis of the loss of eternal life. The mission of
the only-begotten Son consists in conquering sin and death. He conquers
sin by his obedience unto death, and he overcomes death by his Resurrection.
15. When one says that Christ by his mission
strikes at evil at its very roots, we have in mind not only evil and
definitive, eschatological suffering (so that man "should not perish, but
have eternal life"), but also—at least indirectly toil and suffering in
their temporal and historical dimension. For evil remains bound to sin
and death. And even if we must use great caution in judging man's suffering as
a consequence of concrete sins (this is shown precisely by the example of the
just man Job), nevertheless suffering cannot be divorced from the sin of the
beginnings, from what Saint John calls "the sin of the world"(29), from
the sinful background of the personal actions and social processes in human
history. Though it is not licit to apply here the narrow criterion of direct
dependance (as Job's three friends did), it is equally true that one cannot
reject the criterion that, at the basis of human suffering, there is a complex
involvement with sin.
It is the same when we deal with death. It
is often awaited even as a liberation from the suffering of this life. At the
same time, it is not possible to ignore the fact that it constitutes as it were
a definitive summing-up of the destructive work both in the bodily organism and
in the psyche. But death primarily involves the dissolution of the
entire psychophysical personality of man. The soul survives and subsists
separated from the body, while the body is subjected to gradual decomposition
according to the words of the Lord God, pronounced after the sin committed by
man at the beginning of his earthly history: "You are dust and to dust you
shall return"(30). Therefore, even if death is not a form of suffering in
the temporal sense of the word, even if in a certain way it is beyond
all forms of suffering, at the same time the evil which the human being
experiences in death has a definitive and total character. By his salvific
work, the only-begotten Son liberates man from sin and death. First of all he blots
out from human history the dominion of sin, which took root under
the influence of the evil Spirit, beginning with Original Sin, and then he
gives man the possibility of living in Sanctifying Grace. In the wake of his
victory over sin, he also takes away the dominion of death, by his
Resurrection beginning the process of the future resurrection of the body. Both
are essential conditions of "eternal life", that is of man's
definitive happiness in union with God; this means, for the saved, that in the
eschatological perspective suffering is totally blotted out.
As a result of Christ's salvific work, man
exists on earth with the hope of eternal life and holiness. And even
though the victory over sin and death achieved by Christ in his Cross and
Resurrection does not abolish temporal suffering from human life, nor free from
suffering the whole historical dimension of human existence, it nevertheless throws
a new light upon this dimension and upon every suffering: the light of
salvation. This is the light of the Gospel, that is, of the Good News. At the
heart of this light is the truth expounded in the conversation with Nicodemus:
"For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son"(31). This
truth radically changes the picture of man's history and his earthly situation:
in spite of the sin that took root in this history both as an original
inheritance and as the "sin of the world" and as the sum of personal
sins, God the Father has loved the only-begotten Son, that is, he loves him in
a lasting way; and then in time, precisely through this all-surpassing love, he
"gives" this Son, that he may strike at the very roots of human evil
and thus draw close in a salvific way to the whole world of suffering in which
man shares.
16. In his messianic activity in the midst of
Israel, Christ drew increasingly closer to the world of human suffering. "He
went about doing good"(32), and his actions concerned primarily those who
were suffering and seeking help. He healed the sick, consoled the afflicted, fed
the hungry, freed people from deafness, from blindness, from leprosy, from the
devil and from various physical disabilities, three times he restored the dead
to life. He was sensitive to every human suffering, whether of the body or of
the soul. And at the same time he taught, and at the heart of his teaching
there are the eight beatitudes, which are addressed to people tried by
various sufferings in their temporal life. These are "the poor in
spirit" and "the afflicted" and "those who hunger and
thirst for justice" and those who are "persecuted for justice
sake", when they insult them, persecute them and speak falsely every kind
of evil against them for the sake of Christ...(33). Thus according to Matthew;
Luke mentions explicitly those "who hunger now"(34).
At any rate, Christ drew close above all to the
world of human suffering through the fact of having taken this suffering
upon his very self. During his public activity, he experienced not only
fatigue, homelessness, misunderstanding even on the part of those closest to
him, but, more than anything, he became progressively more and more isolated
and encircled by hostility and the preparations for putting him to death.
Christ is aware of this, and often speaks to his disciples of the sufferings
and death that await him: "Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem; and the
Son of man will be delivered to the chief priests and the scribes, and
they will condemn him to death and deliver him to the Gentiles; and they will
mock him, and spit upon him, and scourge him, and kill him; and after three
days he will rise"(35). Christ goes towards his Passion and death with
full awareness of the mission that he has to fulfil precisely in this way.
Precisely by means of this suffering he must bring it about "that
man should not perish, but have eternal life". Precisely by means of his
Cross he must strike at the roots of evil, planted in the history of man and in
human souls. Precisely by means of his Cross he must accomplish the work of
salvation. This work, in the plan of eternal Love, has a redemptive
character.
And therefore Christ severely reproves Peter
when the latter wants to make him abandon the thoughts of suffering and of
death on the Cross(36). And when, during his arrest in Gethsemane, the same
Peter tries to defend him with the sword, Christ says, " Put your sword
back into its place... But how then should the scriptures be fulfilled, that
it must be so?(37)". And he also says, "Shall I not drink the cup
which the Father has given me?"(38). This response, like others that
reappear in different points of the Gospel, shows how profoundly Christ was
imbued by the thought that he had already expressed in the conversation with
Nicodemus: "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that
whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life"(39).
Christ goes toward his own suffering, aware of its saving power; he goes
forward in obedience to the Father, but primarily he is united to the Father
in this love with which he has loved the world and man in the world. And
for this reason Saint Paul will write of Christ: "He loved me and gave
himself for me"(40).
17. The Scriptures had to be fulfilled. There
were many messianic texts in the Old Testament which foreshadowed the
sufferings of the future Anointed One of God. Among all these, particularly
touching is the one which is commonly called the Fourth Song of the
Suffering Servant, in the Book of Isaiah. The Prophet, who has rightly been
called "the Fifth Evangelist", presents in this Song an image of the
sufferings of the Servant with a realism as acute as if he were seeing them
with his own eyes: the eyes of the body and of the spirit. In the light of the
verses of Isaiah, the Passion of Christ becomes almost more expressive and
touching than in the descriptions of the Evangelists themselves. Behold, the
true Man of Sorrows presents himself before us:
"He had no form or comeliness that we
should look
at him, and no beauty that we should desire him.
He was despised and rejected by men;
a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief;
and as one from whom men hide their faces
he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows;
yet we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted.
But he was wounded for our transgressions,
he was bruised for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that made us whole,
and with his stripes we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray
we have turned every one to his own way;
and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all"(41).
The Song of the Suffering Servant contains a
description in which it is possible, in a certain sense, to identify the stages
of Christ's Passion in their various details: the arrest, the humiliation, the
blows, the spitting, the contempt for the prisoner, the unjust sentence, and
then the scourging, the crowning with thorns and the mocking, the carrying of
the Cross, the crucifixion and the agony.
Even more than this description of the Passion,
what strikes us in the words of the Prophet is the depth of Christ's
sacrifice. Behold, He, though innocent, takes upon himself the sufferings
of all people, because he takes upon himself the sins of all. "The Lord
has laid on him the iniquity of us all": all human sin in its
breadth and depth becomes the true cause of the Redeemer's suffering. If the
suffering "is measured" by the evil suffered, then the words of the
Prophet enable us to understand the extent of this evil and suffering
with which Christ burdened himself. It can be said that this is
"substitutive" suffering; but above all it is "redemptive".
The Man of Sorrows of that prophecy is truly that "Lamb of God who takes
away the sin of the world"(42). In his suffering, sins are cancelled out
precisely because he alone as the only-begotten Son could take them upon
himself, accept them with that love for the Father which overcomes the
evil of every sin; in a certain sense he annihilates this evil in the spiritual
space of the relationship between God and humanity, and fills this space with
good.
Here we touch upon the duality of nature of a
single personal subject of redemptive suffering.
He who by his Passion and death on the Cross
brings about the Redemption is the only-begotten Son whom God "gave".
And at the same time this Son who is consubstantial with the Father suffers
as a man. His suffering has human dimensions; it also has unique in the
history of humanity—a depth and intensity which, while being human, can also be
an incomparable depth and intensity of suffering, insofar as the man who
suffers is in person the only-begotten Son himself: " God from God".
Therefore, only he—the only-begotten Son—is capable of embracing the measure of
evil contained in the sin of man: in every sin and in "total" sin,
according to the dimensions of the historical existence of humanity on earth.
18. It can be said that the above considerations
now brings us directly to Gethsemane and Golgotha, where the Song of the
Suffering Servant, contained in the Book of Isaiah, was fulfilled. But before
going there, let us read the next verses of the Song, which give a prophetic
anticipation of the Passion at Gethsemane and Golgotha. The Suffering
Servant—and this in its turn is essential for an analysis of Christ's Passion—takes
on himself those sufferings which were spoken of, in a totally voluntary
way:
"He was oppressed, and he was afflicted,
yet he opened not his mouth;
like a lamb that is led to the slaughter,
and like a sheep that before its shearers is dumb,
so he opened not his mouth.
By oppression and judgment he was taken away;
and as for his generation, who considered that
he was cut off out of the land of the living,
stricken for the transgression of my people?
And they made his grave with the wicked
and with a rich man in his death,
although he had done no violence,
and there was no deceit in his mouth"(43).
Christ suffers voluntarily and suffers
innocently. With his suffering he
accepts that question which—posed by people many times—has been expressed, in a
certain sense, in a radical way by the Book of Job. Christ, however, not only
carries with himself the same question (and this in an even more radical way,
for he is not only a man like Job but the only-begotten Son of God), but he
also carries the greatest possible answer to this question. One can say
that this answer emerges from the very master of which the question is made up.
Christ gives the answer to the question about suffering and the meaning of
suffering not only by his teaching, that is by the Good News, but most of all
by his own suffering, which is integrated with this teaching of the Good News
in an organic and indissoluble way. And this is the final, definitive
word of this teaching: "the word of the Cross", as Saint Paul
one day will say(44).
This "word of the Cross" completes
with a definitive reality the image of the ancient prophecy. Many episodes,
many discourses during Christ's public teaching bear witness to the way in
which from the beginning he accepts this suffering which is the will of the
Father for the salvation of the world. However, the prayer in Gethsemane becomes
a definitive point here. The words: "My Father, if it be possible, let
this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou wilt"(45),
and later: "My Father, if this cannot pass unless I drink it, thy will be
done"(46), have a manifold eloquence. They prove the truth of that love
which the only-begotten Son gives to the Father in his obedience. At the same
time, they attest to the truth of his suffering. The words of that prayer of
Christ in Gethsemane prove the truth of love through the truth of suffering.
Christ's words confirm with all simplicity this human truth of suffering,
to its very depths: suffering is the undergoing of evil before which man
shudders. He says: let it pass from me", just as Christ says in
Gethsemane.
His words also attest to this unique and
incomparable depth and intensity of suffering which only the man who is the
only-begotten Son could experience; they attest to that depth and intensity which
the prophetic words quoted above in their own way help us to understand. Not of
course completely (for this we would have to penetrate the divine-human mystery
of the subject), but at least they help us to understand that difference (and
at the same time the similarity) which exists between every possible form of
human suffering and the suffering of the God-man. Gethsemane is the place where
precisely this suffering, in all the truth expressed by the Prophet concerning
the evil experienced in it, is revealed as it were definitively before the
eyes of Christ's soul.
After the words in Gethsemane come the words
uttered on Golgotha, words which bear witness to this depth—unique in the
history of the world—of the evil of the suffering experienced. When Christ
says: "My God, My God, why have you abandoned me?", his words are not
only an expression of that abandonment which many times found expression in the
Old Testament, especially in the Psalms and in particular in that Psalm 22 [21]
from which come the words quoted(47). One can say that these words on
abandonment are born at the level of that inseparable union of the Son with the
Father, and are born because the Father "laid on him the iniquity of us
all"(48). They also foreshadow the words of Saint Paul: "For our sake
he made him to be sin who knew no sin"(49). Together with this horrible
weight, encompassing the "entire" evil of the turning away
from God which is contained in sin, Christ, through the divine depth of his
filial union with the Father, perceives in a humanly inexpressible way this
suffering which is the separation, the rejection by the Father, the
estrangement from God. But precisely through this suffering he accomplishes the
Redemption, and can say as he breathes his last: "It is
finished"(50).
One can also say that the Scripture has been
fulfilled, that these words of the Song of the Suffering Servant have been
definitively accomplished: "it was the will of the Lord to bruise
him"(51). Human suffering has reached its culmination in the Passion of
Christ. And at the same time it has entered into a completely new dimension and
a new order: it has been linked to love, to that love of which Christ
spoke to Nicodemus, to that love which creates good, drawing it out by means of
suffering, just as the supreme good of the Redemption of the world was drawn
from the Cross of Christ, and from that Cross constantly takes its beginning.
The Cross of Christ has become a source from which flow rivers of living
water(52). In it we must also pose anew the question about the meaning of
suffering, and read in it, to its very depths, the answer to this question.
V
SHARERS
IN THE SUFFERING OF CHRIST
19. The same Song of the Suffering Servant in
the Book of Isaiah leads us, through the following verses, precisely in the
direction of this question and answer:
"When he makes himself an offering for sin,
he shall see his offspring,
he shall prolong his days;
the will of the Lord shall prosper in his hand;
he shall see the fruit of the travail of his soul
and be satisfied;
by his knowledge shall the righteous one, my servant.
make many to be accounted righteous;
and he shall bear their iniquities.
Therefore I will divide him a portion with the great,
and he shall divide the spoil with the strong;
because he poured out his soul to death,
and was numbered with the transgressors;
yet he bore the sin of many,
and made intercession for the transgressors".
One can say that with the Passion of Christ all
human suffering has found itself in a new situation. And it is as though Job
has foreseen this when he said: "I know that my Redeemer lives ...",
and as though he had directed towards it his own suffering, which without the
Redemption could not have revealed to him the fullness of its meaning.
In the Cross of Christ not only is the
Redemption accomplished through suffering, but also human suffering itself
has been redeemed,. Christ, - without any fault of his own - took on
himself "the total evil of sin". The experience of this evil
determined the incomparable extent of Christ's suffering, which became the
price of the Redemption. The Song of the Suffering Servant in Isaiah speaks
of this. In later times, the witnesses of the New Covenant, sealed in the Blood
of Christ, will speak of this.
These are the words of the Apostle Peter in his
First Letter: "You know that you were ransomed from the futile ways
inherited from your fathers, not with the perishable things such as silver or
gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without
blemish or spot".
And the Apostle Paul in the Letter to the Galatians
will say: "He gave himself for our sins to deliver us from the present
evil age"(56), and in the First Letter to the Corinthians: "You were
bought with a price. So glorify God in your body "(57).
With these and similar words the witnesses of
the New Covenant speak of the greatness of the Redemption, accomplished through
the suffering of Christ. The Redeemer suffered in place of man and for man.
Every man has his own share in the Redemption. Each one is also called
to share in that suffering through which the Redemption was accomplished.
He is called to share in that suffering through which all human suffering has
also been redeemed. In bringing about the Redemption through suffering, Christ has
also raised human suffering to the level of the Redemption. Thus
each man, in his suffering, can also become a sharer in the redemptive
suffering of Christ.
20. The texts of the New Testament express this
concept in many places. In the Second Letter to the Corinthians the Apostle
writes: "We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but
not driven to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not
destroyed; always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the
life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies. For while we live we are
always being given up to death for Jesus' sake, so that the life of
Jesus may be manifested in our mortal flesh .... knowing that he who raised the
Lord Jesus will raise us also with Jesus"(58).
Saint Paul speaks of various sufferings and, in
particular, of those in which the first Christians became sharers "for the
sake of Christ ". These sufferings enable the recipients of that Letter to
share in the work of the Redemption, accomplished through the suffering and
death of the Redeemer. The eloquence of the Cross and death is, however,
completed by the eloquence of the Resurrection. Man finds in the
Resurrection a completely new light, which helps him to go forward through the
thick darkness of humiliations, doubts, hopelessness and persecution. Therefore
the Apostle will also write in the Second Letter to the Corinthians: "For as
we share abundantly in Christ's sufferings, so through Christ we share
abundantly in comfort too"(59). Elsewhere he addresses to his recipients
words of encouragement: "May the Lord direct your hearts to the love of
God and to the steadfastness of Christ"(60). And in the Letter to the
Romans he writes: "I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the
mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and
acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship"(61).
The very participation in Christ's suffering
finds, in these apostolic expressions, as it were a twofold dimension. If one
becomes a sharer in the sufferings of Christ, this happens because Christ has
opened his suffering to man, because he himself in his redemptive suffering
has become, in a certain sense, a sharer in all human sufferings. Man,
discovering through faith the redemptive suffering of Christ, also discovers in
it his own sufferings; he rediscovers them, through faith, enriched with
a new content and new meaning.
This discovery caused Saint Paul to write
particularly strong words in the Letter to the Galatians: "I have been
crucified with Christ, it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me: and
the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved
me and gave himself for me"(62). Faith enables the author of these words
to know that love which led Christ to the Cross. And if he loved us in this
way, suffering and dying, then with this suffering and death of his he lives
in the one whom he loved in this way; he lives in the man: in Paul. And
living in him-to the degree that Paul, conscious of this through faith,
responds to his love with love-Christ also becomes in a particular way united
to the man, to Paul, through the Cross. This union caused Paul to
write, in the same Letter to the Galatians, other words as well, no less
strong: "But far be it from me to glory except in the Cross of
our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to
the world"(63).
21. The Cross of Christ throws salvific light,
in a most penetrating way, on man's life and in particular on his suffering.
For through faith the Cross reaches man together with the Resurrection: the
mystery of the Passion is contained in the Paschal Mystery. The witnesses of
Christ's Passion are at the same time witnesses of his Resurrection. Paul
writes: "That I may know him (Christ) and the power of his Resurrection,
and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that if possible
I may attain the resurrection from the dead"(64). Truly, the Apostle first
experienced the "power of the Resurrection" of Christ, on the road to
Damascus, and only later, in this paschal light, reached that " sharing in
his sufferings" of which he speaks, for example, in the Letter to the
Galatians. The path of Paul is clearly paschal: sharing in the Cross of
Christ comes about through the experience of the Risen One, therefore
through a special sharing in the Resurrection. Thus, even in the Apostle's
expressions on the subject of suffering there so often appears the motif of
glory, which finds its beginning in Christ's Cross.
The witnesses of the Cross and Resurrection were
convinced that "through many tribulations we must enter the Kingdom of
God"(65). And Paul, writing to the Thessalonians, says this: "We
ourselves boast of you... for your steadfastness and faith in all your
persecutions and in the afflictions which you are enduring. This is evidence of
the righteous judgment of God, that you may be made worthy of the Kingdom of
God, for which you are suffering"(66). Thus to share in the sufferings
of Christ is, at the same time, to suffer for the Kingdom of God. In the eyes
of the just God, before his judgment, those who share in the suffering of
Christ become worthy of this Kingdom. Through their sufferings, in a certain
sense they repay the infinite price of the Passion and death of Christ, which
became the price of our Redemption: at this price the Kingdom of God has been
consolidated anew in human history, becoming the definitive prospect of man's
earthly existence. Christ has led us into this Kingdom through his suffering.
And also through suffering those surrounded by the mystery of Christ's
Redemption become mature enough to enter this Kingdom.
22. To the prospect of the Kingdom of God is
linked hope in that glory which has its beginning in the Cross of Christ. The
Resurrection revealed this glory—eschatological glory—which, in the Cross of
Christ, was completely obscured by the immensity of suffering. Those who share
in the sufferings of Christ are also called, through their own sufferings, to
share in glory. Paul expresses this in various places. To the Romans he
writes: " We are ... fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him
in order that we may also be glorified with him. I consider that the sufferings
of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be
revealed in us"(67). In the Second Letter to the Corinthians we read:
"For this slight momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal
weight of glory beyond all comparison, because we look not to the things that
are seen but to things that are unseen"(68). The Apostle Peter will
express this truth in the following words of his First Letter: "But
rejoice in so far as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also rejoice
and be glad when his glory is revealed "(69).
The motif of suffering and glory has a
strictly evangelical characteristic, which becomes clear by reference to the
Cross and the Resurrection. The Resurrection became, first of all, the
manifestation of glory, which corresponds to Christ's being lifted up through
the Cross. If, in fact, the Cross was to human eyes Christ's emptying of
himself, at the same time it was in the eyes of God his being lifted up.
On the Cross, Christ attained and fully accomplished his mission: by
fulfilling the will of the Father, he at the same time fully realized himself.
In weakness he manifested his power, and in humiliation he manifested
all his messianic greatness. Are not all the words he uttered during his
agony on Golgotha a proof of this greatness, and especially his words
concerning the perpetrators of his crucifixion: "Father, forgive them for
they know not what they do"(70)? To those who share in Christ's sufferings
these words present themselves with the power of a supreme example. Suffering
is also an invitation to manifest the moral greatness of man, his spiritual
maturity. Proof of this has been given, down through the generations, by
the martyrs and confessors of Christ, faithful to the words: "And do not
fear those who kill the body, but cannot kill the soul .
Christ's Resurrection has revealed "the
glory of the future age" and, at the same time, has confirmed "the
boast of the Cross": the glory that is hidden in the very suffering of
Christ and which has been and is often mirrored in human suffering, as an
expression of man's spiritual greatness. This glory must be acknowledged not
only in the martyrs for the faith but in many others also who, at times, even
without belief in Christ, suffer and give their lives for the truth and for a
just cause. In the sufferings of all of these people the great dignity of man
is strikingly confirmed.
23. Suffering, in fact, is always a trial—at
times a very hard one—to which humanity is subjected. The gospel paradox of
weakness and strength often speaks to us from the pages of the Letters of
Saint Paul, a paradox particularly experienced by the Apostle himself and
together with him experienced by all who share Christ's sufferings. Paul writes
in the Second Letter to the Corinthians: "I will all the more gladly boast
of my weaknesses, that the power of Christ may rest upon me"(72). In the
Second Letter to Timothy we read: "And therefore I suffer as I do. But I
am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed"(73). And in the Letter to
the Philippians he will even say: "I can do all things in him who
strengthens me"(74).
Those who share in Christ's sufferings have
before their eyes the Paschal Mystery of the Cross and Resurrection, in which
Christ descends, in a first phase, to the ultimate limits of human weakness and
impotence: indeed, he dies nailed to the Cross. But if at the same time in this
weakness there is accomplished his lifting up, confirmed
by the power of the Resurrection, then this means that the weaknesses of all
human sufferings are capable of being infused with the same power of God
manifested in Christ's Cross. In such a concept, to suffer means to
become particularly susceptible, particularly open to the working of
the salvific powers of God, offered to humanity in Christ. In him God has
confirmed his desire to act especially through suffering, which is man's
weakness and emptying of self, and he wishes to make his power known precisely
in this weakness and emptying of self. This also explains the exhortation in
the First Letter of Peter: "Yet if one suffers as a Christian, let him not
be ashamed, but under that name let him glorify God"(75).
In the Letter to the Romans, the Apostle Paul
deals still more fully with the theme of this "birth of power in
weakness", this spiritual tempering of man in the midst of trials
and tribulations, which is the particular vocation of those who share in
Christ's sufferings. "More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings,
knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character,
and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us, because God's
love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been
given to us"(76). Suffering as it were contains a special call to the
virtue which man must exercise on his own part. And this is the virtue of
perseverance in bearing whatever disturbs and causes harm. In doing this,
the individual unleashes hope, which maintains in him the conviction that
suffering will not get the better of him, that it will not deprive him of his
dignity as a human being, a dignity linked to awareness of the meaning of life.
And indeed this meaning makes itself known together with the working of
God's love, which is the supreme gift of the Holy Spirit. The more he
shares in this love, man rediscovers himself more and more fully in suffering:
he rediscovers the "soul" which he thought he had
"lost"(77) because of suffering.
24. Nevertheless, the Apostle's experiences as a
sharer in the sufferings of Christ go even further. In the Letter to the
Colossians we read the words which constitute as it were the final stage of the
spiritual journey in relation to suffering: "Now I rejoice in my
sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in
Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the
Church"(78). And in another Letter he asks his readers: "Do you not
know that your bodies are members of Christ?"(79).
In the Paschal Mystery Christ began the union
with man in the community of the Church. The mystery of the Church is
expressed in this: that already in the act of Baptism, which brings about a
configuration with Christ, and then through his Sacrifice—sacramentally through
the Eucharist—the Church is continually being built up spiritually as the Body
of Christ. In this Body, Christ wishes to be united with every individual, and
in a special way he is united with those who suffer. The words quoted above from
the Letter to the Colossians bear witness to the exceptional nature of this
union. For, whoever suffers in union with Christ— just as the Apostle
Paul bears his "tribulations" in union with Christ— not only receives
from Christ that strength already referred to but also "completes" by
his suffering "what is lacking in Christ's afflictions". This
evangelical outlook especially highlights the truth concerning the creative
character of suffering. The sufferings of Christ created the good of the
world's redemption. This good in itself is inexhaustible and infinite. No man
can add anything to it. But at the same time, in the mystery of the Church as
his Body, Christ has in a sense opened his own redemptive suffering to all
human suffering. In so far as man becomes a sharer in Christ's sufferings—in
any part of the world and at any time in history—to that extent he in his
own way completes the suffering through which Christ accomplished the
Redemption of the world.
Does this mean that the Redemption achieved by
Christ is not complete? No. It only means that the Redemption,
accomplished through satisfactory love, remains always open to all love expressed
in human suffering. In this dimension—the dimension of love—the
Redemption which has already been completely accomplished is, in a certain
sense, constantly being accomplished. Christ achieved the Redemption completely
and to the very limits but at the same time he did not bring it to a close. In
this redemptive suffering, through which the Redemption of the world was
accomplished, Christ opened himself from the beginning to every human suffering
and constantly does so. Yes, it seems to be part of the very essence of
Christ's redemptive suffering that this suffering requires to be
unceasingly completed.
Thus, with this openness to every human
suffering, Christ has accomplished the world's Redemption through his own
suffering. For, at the same time, this Redemption, even though it was
completely achieved by Christ's suffering, lives on and in its own special way
develops in the history of man. It lives and develops as the body of Christ,
the Church, and in this dimension every human suffering, by reason of the
loving union with Christ, completes the suffering of Christ. It completes that
suffering just as the Church completes the redemptive work of Christ. The
mystery of the Church—that body which completes in itself also Christ's
crucified and risen body—indicates at the same time the space or context in
which human sufferings complete the sufferings of Christ. Only within this
radius and dimension of the Church as the Body of Christ, which continually
develops in space and time, can one think and speak of "what is
lacking" in the sufferings of Christ. The Apostle, in fact, makes this
clear when he writes of "completing what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church".
It is precisely the Church, which
ceaselessly draws on the infinite resources of the Redemption, introducing it
into the life of humanity, which is the dimension in which the
redemptive suffering of Christ can be constantly completed by the suffering of
man. This also highlights the divine and human nature of the Church. Suffering
seems in some way to share in the characteristics of this nature. And for this
reason suffering also has a special value in the eyes of the Church. It is
something good, before which the Church bows down in reverence with all the
depth of her faith in the Redemption. She likewise bows down with all the depth
of that faith with which she embraces within herself the inexpressible mystery
of the Body of Christ.
VI
THE
GOSPEL OF SUFFERING
25. The witnesses of the Cross and Resurrection
of Christ have handed on to the Church and to mankind a specific Gospel of
suffering. The Redeemer himself wrote this Gospel, above all by his own
suffering accepted in love, so that man "should not perish but have
eternal life"(80). This suffering, together with the living word of his
teaching, became a rich source for all those who shared in Jesus' sufferings
among the first generation of his disciples and confessors and among those who
have come after them down the centuries.
It is especially consoling to note—and also
accurate in accordance with the Gospel and history—that at the side of Christ,
in the first and most exalted place, there is always his Mother through the
exemplary testimony that she bears by her whole life to this particular
Gospel of suffering. In her, the many and intense sufferings were amassed in
such an interconnected way that they were not only a proof of her unshakeable
faith but also a contribution to the redemption of all. In reality, from the
time of her secret conversation with the angel, she began to see in her mission
as a mother her "destiny" to share, in a singular and unrepeatable
way, in the very mission of her Son. And she very soon received a confirmation
of this in the events that accompanied the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, and in
the solemn words of the aged Simeon, when he spoke of a sharp sword that would
pierce her heart. Yet a further confirmation was in the anxieties and
privations of the hurried flight into Egypt, caused by the cruel decision of
Herod.
And again, after the events of her Son's hidden
and public life, events which she must have shared with acute sensitivity, it
was on Calvary that 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
mysterious and supernaturally fruitful for the redemption of the world. Her
ascent of Calvary and her standing at the foot of the Cross together with the
Beloved Disciple were a special sort of sharing in the redeeming death of her
Son. And the words which she heard from his lips were a kind of solemn
handing-over of this Gospel of suffering so that it could be proclaimed to the
whole community of believers.
As a witness to her Son's Passion by her presence,
and as a sharer in it by her compassion, Mary offered a unique
contribution to the Gospel of suffering, by embodying in anticipation the
expression of Saint Paul which was quoted at the beginning. She truly has a
special title to be able to claim that she "completes in her
flesh"—as already in her heart—"what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions ".
In the light of the unmatchable example of
Christ, reflected with singular clarity in the life of his Mother, the Gospel
of suffering, through the experience and words of the Apostles, becomes an
inexhaustible source for the ever new generations that succeed one another
in the history of the Church. The Gospel of suffering signifies not only the
presence of suffering in the Gospel, as one of the themes of the Good News, but
also the revelation of the salvific power and salvific significance of
suffering in Christ's messianic mission and, subsequently, in the mission and
vocation of the Church.
Christ did not conceal from his listeners
the need for suffering. He said very clearly: "If any man would
come after me... let him take up his cross daily ''(81), and before his
disciples he placed demands of a moral nature that can only be fulfilled on
condition that they should "deny themselves"(82). The way that leads
to the Kingdom of heaven is "hard and narrow", and Christ contrasts
it to the "wide and easy" way that "leads to destruction"(83).
On various occasions Christ also said that his disciples and confessors would meet
with much persecution, something which—as we know—happened not only in the
first centuries of the Church's life under the Roman Empire, but also came true
in various historical periods and in other parts of the world, and still does
even in our own time.
Here are some of Christ's statements on this
subject: "They will lay their hands on you and persecute you, delivering
you up to the synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and
governors for my name's sake. This will be a time for you to bear testimony.
Settle it therefore in your minds, not to meditate beforehand how to
answer; for I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which none of your adversaries
will be able to withstand or contradict. You will be delivered up even by
parents and brothers and kinsmen and friends, and some of you they will put to
death; you will be hated by all for my name's sake. But not a hair of
your head will perish. By your endurance you will gain your lives"(84).
The Gospel of suffering speaks first in various
places of suffering "for Christ", "for the sake of Christ",
and it does so with the words of Jesus himself or the words of his Apostles.
The Master does not conceal the prospect of suffering from his disciples and
followers. On the contrary, he reveals it with all frankness, indicating at the
same time the supernatural assistance that will accompany them in the midst of
persecutions and tribulations " for his name's sake". These persecutions
and tribulations will also be, as it were, a particular proof of
likeness to Christ and union with him. "If the world hates you, know that
it has hated me before it hated you...; but because you are not of the world,
but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you... A servant is
not greater than his master. If they persecuted me they will persecute you...
But all this they will do to you on my account, because they do not know him
who sent me"(85). "I have said this to you, that in me you may have peace.
In the world you have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the
world"(86).
This first chapter of the Gospel of suffering,
which speaks of persecutions, namely of tribulations experienced because of
Christ, contains in itself a special call to courage and fortitude, sustained
by the eloquence of the Resurrection. Christ has overcome the world
definitively by his Resurrection. Yet, because of the relationship between the
Resurrection and his Passion and death, he has at the same time overcome the
world by his suffering. Yes, suffering has been singularly present in that
victory over the world which was manifested in the Resurrection. Christ retains
in his risen body the marks of the wounds of the Cross in his hands, feet and
side. Through the Resurrection, he manifests the victorious power of
suffering, and he wishes to imbue with the conviction of this power the
hearts of those whom he chose as Apostles and those whom he continually chooses
and sends forth. The Apostle Paul will say: "All who desire to live a
godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted"(87).
26. While the first great chapter of the Gospel
of suffering is written down, as the generations pass, by those who suffer
persecutions for Christ's sake, simultaneously another great chapter of this
Gospel unfolds through the course of history. This chapter is written by all
those who suffer together with Christ, uniting their human sufferings to
his salvific suffering. In these people there is fulfilled what the first
witnesses of the Passion and Resurrection said and wrote about sharing in the
sufferings of Christ. Therefore in those people there is fulfilled the Gospel
of suffering, and, at the same time, each of them continues in a certain sense
to write it: they write it and proclaim it to the world, they announce it to
the world in which they live and to the people of their time.
Down through the centuries and generations it
has been seen that in suffering there is concealed a particular power
that draws a person interiorly close to Christ, a special grace. To this
grace many saints, such as Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Ignatius of Loyola
and others, owe their profound conversion. A result of such a conversion is not
only that the individual discovers the salvific meaning of suffering but above
all that he becomes a completely new person. He discovers a new dimension, as
it were, of his entire life and vocation. This discovery is a particular
confirmation of the spiritual greatness which in man surpasses the body in a
way that is completely beyond compare. When this body is gravely ill, totally
incapacitated, and the person is almost incapable of living and acting, all the
more do interior maturity and spiritual greatness become evident,
constituting a touching lesson to those who are healthy and normal.
This interior maturity and spiritual greatness
in suffering are certainly the result of a particular conversion and
cooperation with the grace of the Crucified Redeemer. It is he himself who acts
at the heart of human sufferings through his Spirit of truth, through the
consoling Spirit. It is he who transforms, in a certain sense, the very
substance of the spiritual life, indicating for the person who suffers a place
close to himself. It is he—as the interior Master and Guide—who reveals
to the suffering brother and sister this wonderful interchange, situated
at the very heart of the mystery of the Redemption. Suffering is, in itself, an
experience of evil. But Christ has made suffering the firmest basis of the
definitive good, namely the good of eternal salvation. By his suffering on the
Cross, Christ reached the very roots of evil, of sin and death. He conquered
the author of evil, Satan, and his permanent rebellion against the Creator. To
the suffering brother or sister Christ discloses and gradually reveals the
horizons of the Kingdom of God: the horizons of a world converted to the
Creator, of a world free from sin, a world being built on the saving power of
love. And slowly but effectively, Christ leads into this world, into this
Kingdom of the Father, suffering man, in a certain sense through the very heart
of his suffering. For suffering cannot be transformed and changed by a
grace from outside, but from within. And Christ through his own salvific
suffering is very much present in every human suffering, and can act from
within that suffering by the powers of his Spirit of truth, his consoling
Spirit.
This is not all: the Divine Redeemer wishes to
penetrate the soul of every sufferer through the heart of his holy Mother, the
first and the 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 this Cross, should become no longer the weakness of man but the power
of God.
However, this interior process does not always
follow the same pattern. It often begins and is set in motion with great
difficulty. Even the very point of departure differs: people react to suffering
in different ways. But in general it can be said that almost always the
individual enters suffering with a typically human protest and with
the question "why". He asks the meaning of his suffering and
seeks an answer to this question on the human level. Certainly he often puts
this question to God, and to Christ. Furthermore, he cannot help noticing that
the one to whom he puts the question is himself suffering and wishes to
answer him from the Cross, from the heart of his own suffering. Nevertheless,
it often takes time, even a long time, for this answer to begin to be
interiorly perceived. For Christ does not answer directly and he does not
answer in the abstract this human questioning about the meaning of suffering.
Man hears Christ's saving answer as he himself gradually becomes a sharer in
the sufferings of Christ.
The answer which comes through this sharing, by
way of the interior encounter with the Master, is in itself something more
than the mere abstract answer to the question about the meaning of
suffering. For it is above all a call. It is a vocation. Christ does not
explain in the abstract the reasons for suffering, but before all else 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.
Gradually, as the individual takes up his cross, spiritually uniting
himself to the Cross of Christ, the salvific meaning of suffering is revealed
before him. He does not discover this meaning at his own human level, but at
the level of the suffering of Christ. At the same time, however, from this
level of Christ the salvific meaning of suffering descends to man's level and
becomes, in a sense, the individual's personal response. It is then that man
finds in his suffering interior peace and even spiritual joy.
27. Saint Paul speaks of such joy in the Letter
to the Colossians: "I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake"(88). A
source of joy is found in the overcoming of the sense of the uselessness of
suffering, a feeling that is sometimes very strongly rooted in human
suffering. This feeling not only consumes the person interiorly, but seems to
make him a burden to others. The person feels condemned to receive help and
assistance from others, and at the same time seems useless to himself. The
discovery of the salvific meaning of suffering in union with Christ transforms
this depressing feeling. Faith in sharing in the suffering of Christ
brings with it the interior certainty that the suffering person "completes
what is lacking in Christ's afflictions"; the certainty that in the
spiritual dimension of the work of Redemption he is serving, like
Christ, the salvation of his brothers and sisters. Therefore he is
carrying out an irreplaceable service. In the Body of Christ, which is ceaselessly
born of the Cross of the Redeemer, it is precisely suffering permeated by the
spirit of Christ's sacrifice that is the irreplaceable mediator and author
of the good things which are indispensable for the world's salvation. It is
suffering, more than anything else, which clears the way for the grace which
transforms human souls. Suffering, more than anything else, makes present in
the history of humanity the powers of the Redemption. In that
"cosmic" struggle between the spiritual powers of good and evil,
spoken of in the Letter to the Ephesians(89), human sufferings, united to the
redemptive suffering of Christ, constitute a special support for the powers
of good, and open the way to the victory of these salvific powers.
And so the Church sees in all Christ's suffering
brothers and sisters as it were a multiple subject of his supernatural
power. How often is it precisely to them that the pastors of the Church
appeal, and precisely from them that they seek help and support! The Gospel of
suffering is being written unceasingly, and it speaks unceasingly with the
words of this strange paradox: the springs of divine power gush forth precisely
in the midst of human weakness. Those who share in the sufferings of Christ
preserve in their own sufferings a very special particle of the infinite
treasure of the world's Redemption, and can share this treasure with
others. The more a person is threatened by sin, the heavier the structures of
sin which today's world brings with it, the greater is the eloquence which human
suffering possesses in itself. And the more the Church feels the need to have
recourse to the value of human sufferings for the salvation of the world.
VII
THE
GOOD SAMARITAN
28. To the Gospel of suffering there also
belongs—and in an organic way—the parable of the Good Samaritan. Through this
parable Christ wished to give an answer to the question: "Who is my
neighbour?"(90) For of the three travellers along the road from Jerusalem
to Jericho, on which there lay half-dead a man who had been stripped and beaten
by robbers, it was precisely the Samaritan who showed himself to be the real
"neighbour" of the victim: "neighbour" means also the
person who carried out the commandment of love of neighbour. Two other men were
passing along the same road; one was a priest and the other a Levite, but each
of them " saw him and passed by on the other side". The Samaritan, on
the other hand, "saw him and had compassion on him. He went to him, ...
and bound up his wounds ", then "brought him to an inn, and took care
of him"(91). And when he left, he solicitously entrusted the suffering man
to the care of the innkeeper, promising to meet any expenses.
The parable of the Good Samaritan belongs to the
Gospel of suffering. For it indicates what the relationship of each of us must
be towards our suffering neighbour. We are not allowed to "pass by on the
other side" indifferently; we must "stop" beside him. Everyone
who stops beside the suffering of another person, whatever form it may
take, is a Good Samaritan. This stopping does not mean curiosity but
availability. It is like the opening of a certain interior disposition of the
heart, which also has an emotional expression of its own. The name "Good
Samaritan" fits every individual who is sensitive to the sufferings of
others, who "is moved" by the misfortune of another. If Christ,
who knows the interior of man, emphasizes this compassion, this means that it
is important for our whole attitude to others' suffering. Therefore one must
cultivate this sensitivity of heart, which bears witness to compassion towards
a suffering person. Some times this compassion remains the only or principal
expression of our love for and solidarity with the sufferer.
Nevertheless, the Good Samaritan of Christ's
parable does not stop at sympathy and compassion alone. They become for him an
incentive to actions aimed at bringing help to the injured man. In a word,
then, a Good Samaritan is one who brings help in suffering, whatever its
nature may be. Help which is, as far as possible, effective. He puts his whole
heart into it, nor does he spare material means. We can say that he gives
himself, his very "I", opening this "I" to the other
person. Here we touch upon one of the key-points of all Christian anthropology.
Man cannot "fully find himself except through a sincere gift of
himself"(92). A Good Samaritan is the person capable of exactly such
a gift of self.
29. Following the parable of the Gospel, we
could say that suffering, which is present under so many different forms in our
human world, is also present in order to unleash love in the human person, that
unselfish gift of one's "I" on behalf of other people, especially
those who suffer. The world of human suffering unceasingly calls for, so to
speak, another world: the world of human love; and in a certain sense man owes
to suffering that unselfish love which stirs in his heart and actions. The
person who is a " neighbour" cannot indifferently pass by the
suffering of another: this in the name of fundamental human solidarity, still more
in the name of love of neighbour. He must "stop",
"sympathize", just like the Samaritan of the Gospel parable. The
parable in itself expresses a deeply Christian truth, but one that at
the same time is very universally human. It is not without reason that, also in
ordinary speech, any activity on behalf of the suffering and needy is called
"Good Samaritan" work.
In the course of the centuries, this activity
assumes organized institutional forms and constitutes a field of
work in the respective professions. How much there is of "the Good
Samaritan" in the profession of the doctor, or the nurse, or others
similar! Considering its "evangelical" content, we are inclined to
think here of a vocation rather than simply a profession. And the institutions
which from generation to generation have performed " Good Samaritan"
service have developed and specialized even further in our times. This
undoubtedly proves that people today pay ever greater and closer attention to
the sufferings of their neighbour, seek to understand those sufferings and deal
with them with ever greater skill. They also have an ever greater capacity and
specialization in this area. In view of all this, we can say that the parable
of the Samaritan of the Gospel has become one of the essential elements of moral
culture and universally human civilization. And thinking of all those who
by their knowledge and ability provide many kinds of service to their suffering
neighbour, we cannot but offer them words of thanks and gratitude.
These words are directed to all those who
exercise their own service to their suffering neighbour in an unselfish way, freely
undertaking to provide "Good Samaritan" help, and devoting to
this cause all the time and energy at their disposal outside their professional
work. This kind of voluntary "Good Samaritan" or charitable activity
can be called social work; it can also be called an apostolate, when it
is undertaken for clearly evangelical motives, especially if this is in
connection with the Church or another Christian Communion. Voluntary "Good
Samaritan" work is carried out in appropriate milieux or through organizations
created for this purpose. Working in this way has a great importance,
especially if it involves undertaking larger tasks which require cooperation
and the use of technical means. No less valuable is individual activity,
especially by people who are better prepared for it in regard to the various
kinds of human suffering which can only be alleviated in an individual or
personal way. Finally, family help means both acts of love of neighbour
done to members of the same family, and mutual help between families.
It is difficult to list here all the types and
different circumstances of "Good Samaritan" work which exist in the
Church and society. It must be recognized that they are very numerous, and one
must express satisfaction at the fact that, thanks to them, the fundamental
moral values, such as the value of human solidarity, the value of Christian
love of neighbour, form the framework of social life and interhuman relationships
and combat on this front the various forms of hatred, violence, cruelty,
contempt for others, or simple "insensitivity", in other words,
indifference towards one's neighbour and his sufferings.
Here we come to the enormous importance of
having the right attitudes in education. The family, the school and other
education institutions must, if only for humanitarian reasons, work
perseveringly for the reawakening and refining of that sensitivity towards
one's neighbour and his suffering of which the figure of the Good Samaritan in
the Gospel has become a symbol. Obviously the Church must do the same. She must
even more profoundly make her own—as far as possible—the motivations which
Christ placed in his parable and in the whole Gospel. The eloquence of the
parable of the Good Samaritan, and of the whole Gospel, is especially this:
every individual must feel as if called personally to bear witness to
love in suffering. The institutions are very important and indispensable;
nevertheless, no institution can by itself replace the human heart, human
compassion, human love or human initiative, when it is a question of dealing
with the sufferings of another. This refers to physical sufferings, but it is
even more true when it is a question of the many kinds of moral suffering, and
when it is primarily the soul that is suffering.
30. The parable of the Good Samaritan, which —as
we have said—belongs to the Gospel of suffering, goes hand in hand with this
Gospel through the history of the Church and Christianity, through the history
of man and humanity. This parable witnesses to the fact that Christ's
revelation of the salvific meaning of suffering is in no way identified with
an attitude of passivity. Completely the reverse is true. The Gospel is the
negation of passivity in the face of suffering. Christ himself is especially
active in this field. In this way he accomplishes the messianic programme of
his mission, according to the words of the prophet: "The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He
has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the
blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable
year of the Lord"(93). In a superabundant way Christ carries out this messianic
programme of his mission: he goes about "doing good"(94). and the
good of his works became especially evident in the face of human suffering. The
parable of the Good Samaritan is in profound harmony with the conduct of Christ
himself.
Finally, this parable, through its essential
content, will enter into those disturbing words of the Final Judgment, noted by
Matthew in his Gospel: "Come, O blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you
gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you
welcomed me, I was in prison and you came to me"(95). To the just, who ask
when they did all this to him, the Son of Man will respond: "Truly, I say
to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did
it to me"(96). The opposite sentence will be imposed on those who have
behaved differently: "As you did it not to one of the least of these, you
did it not to me"."
One could certainly extend the list of the forms
of suffering that have encountered human sensitivity, compassion and help, or
that have failed to do so. The first and second parts of Christ's words about
the Final Judgment unambiguously show how essential it is, for the eternal life
of every individual, to "stop", as the Good Samaritan did, at the
suffering of one's neighbour, to have "compassion" for that
suffering, and to give some help. In the messianic programme of Christ, which
is at the same time the programme of the Kingdom of God, suffering is
present in the world in order to release love, in order to give birth to works
of love towards neighbour, in order to transform the whole of human
civilization into a "civilization of love". In this love the salvific
meaning of suffering is completely accomplished and reaches its definitive
dimension. Christ's words about the Final Judgment enable us to understand this
in all the simplicity and clarity of the Gospel.
These words about love, about actions of love,
acts linked with human suffering, enable us once more to discover, at the basis
of all human sufferings, the same redemptive suffering of Christ. Christ
said: "You did it to me". He himself is the one who in each
individual experiences love; he himself is the one who receives help, when this
is given to every suffering person without exception. He himself is present in
this suffering person, since his salvific suffering has been opened once and
for all to every human suffering. And all those who suffer have been called
once and for all to become sharers "in Christ's sufferings"(98), just
as all have been called to "complete" with their own suffering
"what is lacking in Christ's afflictions"(99). At one and the same
time Christ has taught man to do good by his suffering and to do good
to those who suffer. In this double aspect he has completely revealed the
meaning of suffering.
VIII
CONCLUSION
31. This is the meaning of suffering, which is
truly supernatural and at the same time human. It is supernatural because
it is rooted in the divine mystery of the Redemption of the world, and it is
likewise deeply human, because in it the person discovers himself, his
own humanity, his own dignity, his own mission.
Suffering is certainly part of the mystery of
man. Perhaps suffering is not wrapped up as much as man is by this mystery,
which is an especially impenetrable one. The Second Vatican Council expressed
this truth that "...only in the mystery of the Incarnate Word does the
mystery of man take on light. In fact..., Christ, the final Adam, by the
revelation of the mystery of the Father and his love, fully reveals man to
himself and makes his supreme calling clear"(100). If these words
refer to everything that concerns the mystery of man, then they certainly refer
in a very special way to human suffering. Precisely at this point the
"revealing of man to himself and making his supreme vocation clear"
is particularly indispensable. It also happens as experience proves—that
this can be particularly dramatic. But when it is completely
accomplished and becomes the light of human life, it is particularly blessed.
"Through Christ and in Christ, the riddles of sorrow and death grow
meaningful"(101).
I now end the present considerations on
suffering in the year in which the Church is living the extraordinary Jubilee
linked to the anniversary of the Redemption.
The mystery of the Redemption of the world is in
an amazing way rooted in suffering, and this suffering in turn finds in
the mystery of the Redemption its supreme and surest point of reference.
We wish to live this Year of the Redemption in
special union with all those who suffer. And so there should come together in
spirit beneath the Cross on Calvary all suffering people who believe in Christ,
and particularly those who suffer because of their faith in him who is the
Crucified and Risen One, so that the offering of their sufferings may hasten
the fulfilment of the prayer of the Saviour himself that all may be one(102).
Let there also gather beneath the Cross all people of good will, for on this
Cross is the "Redeemer of man", the Man of Sorrows, who has taken
upon himself the physical and moral sufferings of the people of all times, so
that in love they may find the salvific meaning of their sorrow and
valid answers to all of their questions.
Together with Mary, Mother of Christ, who stood beneath the Cross(103),we
pause beside all the crosses of contemporary man.
We invoke all the Saints, who down the
centuries in a special way shared in the suffering of Christ. We ask them to
support us.
And we ask all you who suffer to support
us. We ask precisely you who are weak to become a source of strength for
the Church and humanity. In the terrible battle between the forces of good and
evil, revealed to our eyes by our modern world, may your suffering in union with
the Cross of Christ be victorious!
To all of you, dearest brothers and sisters, I
send my Apostolic Blessing.
Given at
JOHN
PAUL II
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4) Cfr. IOANNIS PAULI PP. II Redemptor
Hominis, 14. 18. 21. 22.
(5) Quod Ezechias subiit (cfr. Is. 38, 1-3).
(6) Sic ut Agar timuit (cfr. Gen. 15,
16), Iacob mente finxit (cfr. Gen. 37, 33-35), David expertus est (cfr.
2 Sam. 19, 1).
(7) Id Anna metuit, Tobiae mater (cfr. Tob.
10, 1-7; cfr.
(8) Talis fuit Abrahae (cfr. Gen. 15, 2),
Rachelis (cfr. Gen. 30, 1), Annae, Samuelis matris (cfr. 1 Sam.
1, 6-10), temptatio.
(9) Ut exsulum Babylonica lamentatio (cfr. Ps.
137 [136]).
(10) Quibus v. gr. affectus est Psaltes (cfr. Ps.
22 [21], 17-21), Ieremias (cfr. Ier. 18, 18).
(11) Sic ut accidit Iob (cfr. Iob 19, 18;
30, 1. 9), nonnullis Psaltibus (cfr. Ps. 22 [21], 7-9; Ps. 42
[41], 11; Ps. 44 [43], 16-17), Ieremiae (cfr. Ier. 20, 7), Servo
patienti (cfr. Is. 53, 3).
(12) Quibus iterum oppressi sunt nonnulli
Psaltes (cfr. Ps. 22 [21], 2-3; Ps. 31 [30], 13; Ps. 38
[37], 12; Ps. 88 [87], 9. 19); Ieremias (cfr. Ier. 15, 17) atque
Servus patiens (cfr. Is. 53, 3).
(13) His Psaltes (Ps. 51 [50], 5), testes
aerumnarum Servi (cfr. Is. 53, 3-6) et Zacharias Propheta (cfr. Zac.
12, 10) confusi sunt.
(14) Talia passi sunt tum Psaltes (cfr. Ps.
73 [72], 3-14), tum Qoelet (cfr. Qo. 4, 1-3).
(15) Haec perpessi sunt sive Iob (cfr. Iob
19, 19), sive Psaltes nonnulli (cfr. Ps. 41 [40], 10; Ps. 55
[54], 13-15), sive Ieremias (cfr. Ier. 20, 10); Siracides vero de hac
miseria meditatur (cfr. Sir. 37, 1-6).
(16) Praeter plures Lamentationum locos,
cfr. psalmistarum questus (cfr. Ps. 44 [43], 10-17; Ps. 77 [76],
3-11; Ps. 79 [78], 11; Ps. 89 [88], 51), prophetarum (cfr. Is.
22, 4; Ier. 4, 8; 13, 17; 14, 17-18; Ez. 9, 8; 21, 11-12). Cfr.
etiam Azariae orationes (cfr. Dan. 3, 31-40), et Danielis (cfr. Dan.
9, 16-19).
(17) Cfr. e. gr. Is. 38, 13; Ier.
23, 9; Ps. 31 (30), 10-11; Ps. 42 (41), 10-11.
(18) Cfr. Ps. 73 (72), 21; Iob 16,
13; Lam. 3, 13.
(19) Cfr. Lam. 2, 11.
(20) Cfr. Is. 16, 11; Ier. 4, 19; Iob
30, 27; Lam. 1, 20.
(21) Cfr. 1 Sam. 1, 8; Ier. 4, 19;
8, 18; Lam. 1, 20-22; Ps. 38 (37), 9. 11.
(22) Meminisse iuvat radicem Hebraicam
r" designare in universum quod malum est et bono oppositum (tob),
nullamque admittere distinctionem inter sensum physicum, psychicum, ethicum.
Invenitur etiam in substantiva forma ra' et ra'a, significante
sine discrimine sive quod malum est in se, sive malam actionem, sive etiam male
agentem. In formis verbalibus praeter simplicem illam formam (qal),
quae, varia quidem ratione, designat « aliquid malum esse », invenitur etiam
forma reflexiva-passiva (niphal), id est « malum subire », « maio
corripi », atque forma causativa (hiphil), « malum inferre » seu «
irrogare » alicui. Cum autem careat lingua Hebraica verbo Graecae formae
respondente, idcirco fortasse verbum id raro in versione a Septuaginta
occurrit.
(23) Dan. 3, 27 s.; cfr. Ps. 17
(18), 10; Ps. 36 (35), 7; Ps. 48 (47), 12; Ps. 51 (50), 6;
Ps. 99 (98), 4; Ps. 119 (118), 75; Mal. 3, 16-21; Matth.
20, 16; Marc. 10, 31; Luc. 17, 34; Io. 5, 30; Rom.
2, 2.
(24) Iob 4, 8.
(25) Iob 1, 9-11.
(26) Cfr. 2 Macc. 6, 12.
(27) Io. 3, 16.
(28) Iob 19, 25-26.
(29) 1, 29.
(30) Gen. 3, 19.
(31) Io. 3, 16.
(32) Act. 10, 38.
(33) Cfr. Matth. 5, 3-11.
(34) Cfr. Luc. 6, 21.
(35) Marc. 10, 33-34.
(36) Cfr. Matth. 16, 23.
(37) Ibid. 26, 52. 54.
(38) Io. 18, 11.
(39) Ibid. 3, 16.
(40) Gal. 2, 20.
(41) Is. 53, 2-6.
(42) Io. 1, 29.
(43) Is. 53, 7-9.
(44) Cfr. 1 Cor. 1, 18.
(45) Matth. 26, 39.
(46) Ibid. 26, 42.
(47) Ps. 22 (21), 2.
(48) Is. 53, 6.
(49) 2 Cor. 5, 21.
(50) Io. 19, 30.
(51) Is. 53, 10.
(52) Cfr. Io. 7, 37-38.
(53) Is. 53, 10-12.
(54) Iob. 19, 25.
(55) 1 Petr. 1, 18-19.
(56) Gal. 1, 4.
(57) 1 Cor. 6, 20.
(58) 2 Cor. 4, 8-11. 14.
(59) Ibid. 1, 5.
(60) 2 Thess. 3, 5.
(61)
(62) Gal. 2, 19-20.
(63) Ibid. 6, 14.
(64) Phil. 3, 10-11.
(65) Act. 14, 22.
(66) 2 Thess. 1, 4-5.
(67) Rom. 8, 17-18.
(68) 2 Cor. 4, 17-18.
(69) 1 Petr. 4, 13.
(70) Luc. 23, 34.
(71) Matth. 10, 28.
(72) 2 Cor. 12, 9.
(73) 2 Tim. 1, 12.
(74) Phil. 4, 13.
(75) 1 Petr. 4, 16.
(76) Rom. 5, 3-5.
(77) Cfr. Marc. 8, 35; Luc. 9, 24;
Io. 12, 25.
(78)
(79) 1 Cor. 6, 15.
(80) Io. 3, 16.
(81) Luc. 9, 23.
(82) Cfr. ibid.
(83) Cfr. Matth. 7, 13-14.
(84) Luc. 21, 12-19.
(85) Io. 15, 18-21.
(86) Ibid. 16, 33.
(87) 2 Tim. 3, 12.
(88)
(89) Cfr. Eph. 6, 12.
(90) Luc. 10, 29.
(91) Ibid. 10, 33-34.
(92) Gaudium et Spes, 24.
(93) Luc. 4, 18-19; cfr. Is. 61,
1-2.
(94) Act. 10, 38.
(95) Matth. 25, 34-36.
(96) Ibid. 25, 40.
(97) Ibid. 25, 45.
(98) 1 Petr. 4, 13.
(99)
(100) Gaudium et Spes, 22.
(101) Gaudium et Spes, 22.
(102) Cfr. Io. 17, 11. 21-22.
(103) Cfr. ibid. 19, 25.
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Copyright 1984 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana