Today,
Jesus speaks to us indirectly of the cross: He will give us the
peace, but at the cost of his painful “departure” of this
world. Today, we read those words He said before the sacrifice on the
Cross but that were written after his Resurrection. With his death on
the Cross, He defeats both death and fear. He gives the peace «but
not as the world gives peace» (Jn 14:27), inasmuch as He
does it by going through the most excruciating pain and humiliation:
this is how He proved his merciful love for man.
As of the moment sin
entered the world, suffering in our lives is unavoidable. There are
times when it is a physical pain; others, it is a moral suffering;
and then, there are times when it is a matter of a spiritual pain...,
and we all have to die. But God in his infinite love has given us the
remedy to have peace amidst the pain: He has accepted “to
leave” this world with a painful “departure”
surrounded by serenity.
Why did He do it in
such a way? Because thus, human pain —together with Christ's
suffering— becomes a sacrifice that saves us from sin. «In
the Cross of Christ (...), human suffering has been redeemed»
(John Paul II). Jesus Christ quietly suffered to please the Heavenly
Father with an act of costly obedience, through which He willingly
offered Himself for our salvation.
An unknown author of
the 2nd century attributes these words to Jesus: «See the spits
over my face, which I received from you, to give you back the first
gust of life I had blown on your face. See my cheeks, which were
slapped so I could reform your deteriorated aspect according to my
new image. See my back, which was lashed to remove the weight of your
sins from your shoulders. See my hands, so strongly nailed to the
cross for you, who, in times ago, fatally stretched out one of your
hands towards the forbidden tree».