·
Thursday
Evening
make a 1-hour adoration and meditate on the
FIRST; SECOND and THIRD STATIONS
Pope
Benedict XVI Stations of the Cross[1]
FIRST STATION
Jesus in agony in the Garden of Olives
From the Gospel
according to Saint Luke. 22:41-44
Jesus withdrew from
them about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and prayed, “Father, if you are
willing, remove this cup from me; nevertheless not my will but yours be done.”
And there appeared to him an angel from heaven strengthening him. And being in
agony he prayed more earnestly; and his sweat became like great drops of blood
falling down upon the ground.
MEDITATION Jesus was in agony. Grief and anguish came
upon him. The sin of all mankind weighed on him heavily. But the greater his
pain, the more fervently did he pray. Pain always remains a challenge to us. We
feel left alone. We forget to pray, and break down. Some even take their lives.
But if we turn to God, we grow spiritually strong and go out to help our
fellow-beings in trouble. Jesus continues to suffer in his persecuted
disciples. Pope Benedict XVI says that even in our times “the Church does not
lack martyrs”. Christ is in agony among us, and in our times. We pray for those
who suffer. The mystery of Christian suffering is that it has a redemptive
value. May the harassments that believers undergo complete in them the
sufferings of Christ that bring salvation.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, enable us to delve deeper into the
great “mystery of evil” and our own contribution to it. As sufferings came into
human life through sin, it was your plan that humanity be saved from sin
through suffering. May none of the little annoyances, humiliations, and
frustrations that we undergo in our daily lives and the great shocks that take
us by surprise, go to waste. Linked with your own agony, may the agonies we
endure be acceptable to you and bring us hope. Lord, teach us to be
compassionate, not only to the hungry, thirsty, sick, or those in some special
need, but also to those inclined to be rude, argumentative and hurtful. In this
way, as you have helped us in all our troubles, we may in turn “comfort those
who are in any affliction, with the comfort that we ourselves have received”.
SECOND STATION
Jesus is betrayed by Judas, and restrains
Peter from violence
From the Gospel
according to Saint Luke 22:47-50 and according to Saint Matthew 26:52.56
While Jesus was still
speaking, there came a crowd, and the man called Judas, one of the twelve, was
leading them. He drew near to Jesus to kiss him; but Jesus said to him, “Judas,
would you betray the Son of man with a kiss?” And when those who were about him
saw what would follow, they said, “Lord, shall we strike with the sword?” And
one of them struck the slave of the high priest and cut off his right ear. Then
Jesus said to him, “Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the
sword will perish by the sword.” Then all the disciples forsook him and fled.
MEDITATION It is one of his trusted friends that betrays
Jesus, and with a kiss. The way Jesus confronted violence has a message for our
times. Violence is suicidal, he tells Peter: it is not defeated by more
violence, but by a superior spiritual energy that reaches out in the form of
healing love. Jesus touches the High Priest’s slave and heals him. The violent man
today too may need a healing touch that comes from a love that transcends the
immediate issues. In times of conflict between persons, ethnic and religious
groups, nations, economic and political interests, Jesus says, confrontation
and violence are not the answer, but love, persuasion and reconciliation. Even
when we seem to fail in such efforts, we plant the seeds of peace which will
bear fruit in due time. The rightness of our cause is our strength.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, you consider us your friends, yet
we notice traces of infidelity in ourselves. We acknowledge our transgressions.
We are presumptuous at times and over-confident. And we fall. Let not avarice,
lust or pride take us by surprise. How thoughtlessly do we fly after ephemeral
satisfactions and untested ideas! Grant that we may not be tossed to and fro
and carried about by every wind of doctrine… but speaking the truth in love,
grow up in every way into Christ the head. May truth and sincerity of purpose
be our strength. Restrain, Lord, our impetuosity in situations of violence, as
you restrained Peter’s impulsive character. Keep us unruffled in spirit before
opposition and unfair treatment. Convince us that “A gentle answer quiets
anger” in our families, and that “gentleness” combined with “wisdom” restores
tranquility in society. “Lord, make me an instrument of Your peace.”
THIRD STATION
Jesus is held guilty by the
Sanhedrin
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew 26:62-66
And the High Priest stood up and said, “Have you no answer to
make? What is it that these men testify against you? But Jesus was silent. And
the High Priest said to him, “I adjure you by the living God, tell us if you
are the Christ, the Son of God.” Jesus said to him, “You have said so. But I
tell you, hereafter you will see the Son of man seated at the right hand of
Power, and coming on the clouds of heaven.” Then the High Priest tore his
robes, and said, “He has uttered blasphemy. What do we still need witnesses?
You have now heard his blasphemy. What is your judgement? They answered, “He
deserves death.”
MEDITATION In every land, there have been innocent persons who
suffered, people who died fighting for freedom, equality or justice. Those who
struggle on behalf of God’s little ones are promoting God’s own work. For he
presses for the rights of the weak and the oppressed. Whoever collaborates in
this work, in the spirit of Jesus, brings hope to the oppressed and offers a
corrective message to the evildoer himself. Jesus’ manner of struggling for
justice is not to rouse the collective anger of people against the opponent, so
that they are led into forms of greater injustice. On the contrary, it is to
challenge the foe with the rightness of one’s cause and evoke the good will of
the opponent in such a way that injustice is renounced through persuasion and a
change of heart. Mahatma Gandhi brought this teaching of Jesus on non-violence
into public life with amazing success.
PRAYER Lord, often we judge others in haste, indifferent to actual
realities and insensitive to people’s feelings! We develop stratagems of
self-justification and explain away the irresponsible manner in which we have
dealt with “the other”. Forgive us! When we are misjudged and ill-treated,
Lord, give us the inner serenity and self-confidence that your Son manifested
in the face of unjust treatment. Keep us from an aggressive response which goes
against your Spirit. On the contrary, help us to bring your powerful word of
forgiveness into situations of tension and anxiety, so that it may reveal its
dynamic power in history. “In His will is our peace.”
·
Friday
arise before the "cock crows" (2 hrs. before sunrise)
meditate on the FOURTH STATION
FOURTH STATION
Jesus is denied by Peter
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 22:54-62
Then they seized Jesus and led him away, bringing him into the
high priest’s house. Peter followed at a distance; and when they had kindled a
fire in the middle of the courtyard and sat down together, Peter sat among
them. Then a maid, seeing him as he sat in the light and gazing at him, said,
“This man was with him.” But he denied it, saying, “Woman, I do not know him.”
And a little later someone else saw him and said, “You also are one of them.”
But Peter said, “Man, I am not.” And after an interval of about an hour still
another insisted, saying, “Certainly this man was also with him; for he is a
Galilean.” But Peter said, “Man, I do not know what you are saying.” And
immediately, while he was still speaking, the cock crowed. And the Lord turned
and looked at Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how he had said
to him, “Before the cock crows today, you will deny me three times.” And he
went out and wept bitterly.
MEDITATION Peter claimed to be strong, but he broke down before
a servant girl. Human weakness takes us by surprise, and we collapse. That is
why Jesus asks us to watch and pray. He urges self-renunciation and closeness
to God. There is a rebellious “self” within us. We are often of “two minds”,
but we fail to recognize this inner inconsistency. Peter recognized it when his
eyes met the eyes of Jesus, and he wept. Later, Thomas, encountering the Risen
Lord, acknowledged his own faithlessness and believed. In the light of Christ,
Paul became aware of the inconsistency within himself, and he overcame it with
the Lord’s help. Going deeper still, he discovered: “It is no longer I who
live, but it is Christ who lives in me.”
PRAYER Lord, how easily do we allow a distance to grow between what we
profess to be and what we really are! How often do we fail to carry out our own
decisions, or even fulfil our most solemn promises! And as a result we often
hesitate to make any permanent commitment, even to you! We confess that we have
failed to bring into our life that inner discipline that is expected of any
adult person and required for the success of any human endeavor. Give
sturdiness to our inner determination; help us to bring every good work we have
begun to a successful conclusion. Enable us to stand firm, as mature and fully
convinced Christians, “in complete obedience to God’s will”.
·
Friday
after sunrise
meditate on the FIFTH STATION
FIFTH STATION
Jesus is judged by Pilate
A third time Pilate said to them, “Why, what evil has he done? I
have found in him no crime deserving death; I will therefore chastise him and
release him”. But they were urgent, demanding with loud cries that he should be
crucified. And their voices prevailed. So Pilate gave sentence that their
demand should be granted. He released the man who had been thrown into prison
for insurrection and murder, whom they asked for; but Jesus he delivered up to
their will.
MEDITATION It was not the rightness of an issue that mattered to
Pilate, but his professional interests. Such an attitude did not help him,
either in this case or in his later career. He was so unlike Jesus, whose inner
rectitude made him fearless. Nor was Pilate interested in the truth. He walks
away from Jesus exclaiming, “What is truth?” Such indifference to truth is not
uncommon these days. People are often concerned about what gives immediate
satisfaction. They are content with superficial answers. Decisions are made
based not on principles of integrity, but on opportunistic considerations.
Failing to make morally responsible options damages the vital interests of the
human person, and of the human family. We pray that the “spiritual and ethical
concepts” contained in the word of God will inspire the living norms of society
in our times.
PRAYER Lord, give us the courage to make responsible decisions when
rendering a public service. Bring probity (correctness) into public life and assist us
to be true to our conscience. Lord, you are the source of all Truth. Guide
us in our search for ultimate answers. Going beyond mere partial and incomplete
explanations, may we search for what is permanently true, beautiful and good. Lord,
keep us fearless before the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune”. When shadows
grow deep on life’s wearisome paths, and the dark night comes, enable us to
hearken to the teaching of your Apostle Paul: “Be watchful, stand firm in your
faith, be courageous, be strong.”
·
Friday
around 9 am
meditate on the SIXTH STATION
SIXTH STATION
Jesus is scourged and crowned
with thorns
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew. 27:26-30
Then Pilate, having scourged Jesus, delivered him to be
crucified. Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the praetorium,
and they gathered the whole battalion before him. And they stripped him and put
a scarlet robe upon him, and plaiting a crown of thorns they put it on his
head, and put a reed in his right hand. And kneeling before him they mocked
him, saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” And they spat upon him, and took the
reed and struck him on the head.
MEDITATION Inhumanity reaches new heights. Jesus is scourged and
crowned with thorns. History is full of hatred and wars. Even today we witness
acts of violence beyond belief: murder, violence to women and children,
kidnapping, extortion, ethnic conflict, urban violence, physical and mental torture,
violations of human rights. Jesus continues to suffer when believers are
persecuted, when justice is distorted in court, corruption gets rooted, unjust
structures grind the poor, minorities are suppressed, refugees and migrants are
ill-treated. Jesus’ garments are pulled away when the human person is put to
shame on the screen, when women are compelled to humiliate themselves, when
slum children go round the streets picking up crumbs. Who are the guilty? Let
us not point a finger at others, for we ourselves may have contributed a share
to these forms of inhumanity.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, we know that it is you who suffer when we cause pain
to each other and we remain indifferent. Your heart went out in compassion when
you saw the crowds “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd”. Give
me eyes that notice the needs of the poor and a heart that reaches out in love.
“Give me the strength to make my love fruitful in service.” Most of all, may we
share with the indigent your “word” of hope, your assurance of care. May “zeal
for your house” burn in us like a fire. Help us to bring the sunshine of your
joy into the lives of those who are trudging the path of despair.
·
Friday
around 10 am
meditate on the SEVENTH STATION
SEVENTH STATION
After Jesus is made an object
of fun, he is led out to be crucified
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew. 27:31
And when they had mocked him, they stripped him of the robe, and
put his own clothes on him, and led him away to be crucified.
MEDITATION Jesus, at whose name every knee in heaven and earth
bends, is made an object of fun. We are shocked to see to what levels of
brutality human beings can sink. Jesus is humiliated in new ways even today:
when things that are most Holy and Profound in the Faith are being trivialized;
the sense of the sacred is allowed to erode; the religious sentiment is
classified among unwelcome leftovers of antiquity. Everything in public life
risks being desacralized: persons, places, pledges, prayers, practices, words,
sacred writings, religious formulae, symbols, ceremonies. Our life together is
being increasingly secularized. Religious life grows diffident. Thus we see the
most momentous matters placed among trifles, and trivialities glorified. Values
and norms that held societies together and drew people to higher ideals are
laughed at and thrown overboard. Jesus continues to be ridiculed!
PRAYER We have faith, Lord, but not enough. Help us to have more. May
we never question or mock serious things in life like a cynic. Allow us not to
drift into the desert of godlessness. Enable us to perceive you in the gentle
breeze, see you in street corners, love you in the unborn child. God, enable us
to understand that on Tabor or Calvary, your Son is the Lord. Robed or stripped
of his garments, he is the Savior of the world. Make us attentive to his quiet
presences: in his “word”, in tabernacles, shrines, humble places, simple
persons, the life of the poor, laughter of children, whispering pines, rolling
hills, the tiniest living cell, the smallest atom, and the distant galaxies. May
we watch with wonder as he walks on the waters of the Rhine and the Nile and
the Tanganyika.
·
Friday
around 11 am
meditate on the EIGHTH and NINTH STATION
EIGHTH STATION
Jesus is helped by Simon of Cyrene
to carry the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:26
The soldiers led Jesus away, and as they were going, they met a
man from Cyrene named Simon who was coming into the city from the country. They
seized him, put the cross on him, and made him carry it behind Jesus.
MEDITATION In Simon of Cyrene, we have the proto-type of a
faithful disciple who takes up the Cross and follows Christ. He is not unlike
millions of Christians from a humble background, with deep attachment to
Christ. No glamour, no sophistication, but profound faith. Such believers keep
rising on the soil of Africa, Asia and the distant islands. Vocations arise
from their midst. Simon reminds us of small communities and tribes with their
characteristic commitment to the common good, deep rootedness in ethical values
and openness to the Gospel. They deserve attention and care. The Lord does not
desire that “one of these little ones should perish”. In Simon we discover the
sacredness of the ordinary and the greatness of what looks small. For the
smallest has some mystic relationship with the greatest, and the ordinary with
the most extraordinary!
PRAYER Lord, it is your wonderful plan to lift up the lowly and sustain
the poor. Strengthen your Church in her service to deprived communities: the
least privileged, the marginalized, slum dwellers, the rural poor, the
undernourished, untouchables, the handicapped, people given to addictions. May
the example of your servant, Mother Teresa of Kolkata, inspire us to dedicate
more of our energies and resources to the cause of the “poorest of the poor”.
May we one day hear these words from Jesus: “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 naked and you clothed me; I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison
and you came to me.”
NINTH STATION
Jesus meets the women of
Jerusalem
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:27-28
And there followed him a great multitude of the people, and of
women who bewailed and lamented him. But Jesus, turning to them, said:
“Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for
your children.”
MEDITATION Before the weeping women, Jesus is self-forgetful.
His anxiety is not about his pains, but about the tragic future that awaits
them and their children. The destinies of societies are intimately linked to
the wellbeing of their women. Wherever women are held in low esteem or their
role remains diminished, societies fail to rise to their true potentiality. In the
same way, wherever their responsibility to the rising generation is neglected,
ignored, or marginalized, the future of that society becomes uncertain. There
are many societies in the world where women fail to receive a fair deal. Christ
must be weeping for them. There are societies too that are thoughtless about
their future. Christ must be weeping for their children. Wherever there is
unconcern for the future, through the overuse of resources, the degradation of
the environment, the oppression of women, the neglect of family values, the
ignoring of ethical norms, the abandonment of religious traditions, Jesus must
be telling people: “Do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your
children.”
PRAYER Lord, you are the Master of history. And yet you wanted our
collaboration in realizing your plans. Help us to play a responsible role in
society: leaders in their communities, parents in their families, educators and
health-workers among those who need to be served, communicators in the world of
information. Arouse in us a sense of mission in what we do, a deep sense of
responsibility to each other, to society, to our common future and to you. For
you have placed the destinies of our communities and of humanity itself into
our hands. Lord, do not turn away from us when you see women humiliated or your
image disfigured in the human person; when we interfere with life-systems,
weaken the nurturing power of nature, pollute running streams or the deep blue
seas or the Northern snows. Save us from cruel indifference to our common
future, and do not let us drag our civilization down the path of decline.
·
Friday
around NOON
meditate on the TENTH STATION
TENTH STATION
Jesus is crucified
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke 23:33-37 and according to Saint Matthew. 27:46
There they crucified him, and the criminals, one on the right
and one on the left. And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them; for they know not
what they do.” And they cast lots to divide his garments. And the people stood
by, watching; but the rulers scoffed at him, saying, “He saved others; let him
save himself, if he is the Christ of God, his Chosen One!” The soldiers also
mocked him, coming up and offering him vinegar, and saying, “If you are the
King of the Jews, save yourself!” And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a
loud voice, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?”, that is, “My God, my God, why have
you forsaken me?”
MEDITATION The sufferings of Jesus reach a climax. He had stood
fearlessly before Pilate. He had endured the mistreatment of the Roman
soldiers. He had preserved his calm under the scourge and the crowning with
thorns. On the Cross itself, he seemed untouched by a shower of insults. He had
no word of complaint, no desire to retort. But then, finally, a moment comes
when he breaks down. His strength can stand no more. He feels abandoned even by
his Father! Experience tells us that even the sturdiest man can descend to the
depths of despair. Frustrations accumulate, anger and resentment pile up. Bad
health, bad news, bad luck, bad treatment – all can come together. It may have
happened to us. It is at such moments we need to remember that Jesus never
fails us. He cried to the Father. May we too cry out to the Father, who
unfailingly comes to our rescue in all our distress, whenever we call upon him!
PRAYER Lord, when clouds gather on the horizon and everything seems
lost, when we find no friend to stand by us and hope slips from our hands,
teach us to trust in you, who will surely come to our rescue. May the
experience of inner pain and darkness teach us the great truth that in you
nothing is lost, that even our sins – once we have repented of them – come to
serve a purpose, like dry wood in the cold of winter. Lord, you have a
master design beneath the working of the universe and the progress of history.
Open our eyes to the rhythms and patterns in the movements of the stars;
balance and proportion in the inner structure of elements; interrelatedness and
complementarity in nature; progress and purpose in the march of history;
correction and compensation in our personal stories. It is this harmony that
you constantly keep restoring, despite the painful imbalances that we bring
about. In you even the greatest loss is a gain. Christ’s death, in fact, points
to resurrection.
·
Friday
around 1 PM
meditate on the ELEVENTH STATION
ELEVENTH STATION
Jesus promises his Kingdom to
the Good Thief
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:39-43
One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying, “Are
you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying,
“Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation?
And we indeed justly; for we are receiving the due reward of our deeds; but
this man has done nothing wrong.” And he said, “Jesus, remember me when you
come into your kingdom.” And he said to him, “Truly, I say to you, today you
will be with me in Paradise.”
MEDITATION It is not eloquence that convinces and converts. In
the case of Peter, it is a look of love; in the case of the Good Thief, it is
unresentful serenity in suffering. Conversion takes place like a miracle. God
opens your eyes. You recognize his presence and action. You surrender! Opting
for Christ is always a mystery. Why does one make a definitive choice for
Christ, even in the face of trouble, or death? Why do Christians flourish in
persecuted places? We shall never know. But it happens over and over again. If
a person who has abandoned his faith comes across the real face of Christ, he
will be stunned by what he actually sees, and may surrender like Thomas: “My
Lord and my God!” It is a privilege to unveil the face of Christ to people. It
is even a greater joy to discover – or rediscover -him. “Your face, O Lord, do
I seek. Do not hide your face from me.”
Theophilus
of Alexandria: 'Crucifixion and the Good Thief'.[2]
The sun of righteousness appeared in the east and gave light to those who were
in the darkness and in the shadow of death (Lk. 1:79) ...The powerful lion
sprang up out of the wood; all the wild beasts hid in their dens…This, if you
like, is the way of Our Lord Jesus Christ, when he saw the real enemy of the
whole human race, who is the devil. For the devil invaded the whole earth, and
afflicted everyone with many kinds of sins, which he spreads with these great
scourges, namely, idolatry, robbery, vanity, fornication, theft, murder,
slander, licentiousness, envy, hatred, contempt, anger, sorcery, pollution,
fraud, arrogance, perjury, falsehood, corruption, prostitution, deceit and
whatever is similar in them. These are the traps which the devil set for humanity,
until he brought it to perdition and dispersed it. Well now. Let us consider in
what way Christ the king made war against the devil until he released our souls
from him and set them free. Let us begin, then, to penetrate the great treasure
house full of the fruits of life.
·
This
is the great holy mystery of the wood of the cross, on which the True God,
Jesus Christ, mounted out of love. When he descended into this world, he came
to the people of Israel and preached to them saying: 'Repent for the kingdom of
Heaven is at hand.' (Mt. 4:17)
·
But
they paid no heed to his holy counsels. After this he performed all the signs
of his divinity in their presence, miracles without number. He made the blind
see, the lame walk and the deaf hear. He healed lepers. He brought the dead
back to life. He drove out demons. He made paralytics stand on their feet and
forgave their sins. He made tax gatherers repent. He straightened vainglorious
hands. He evangelized the poor. He remitted the sins of adulteresses and purified
them with his divinity, restoring them to a virginal state. It was because an
adulterous woman was made worthy of this great grace that her hands anointed
the feet of him who had created her. (Lk. 7 37-8) From the moment she
participated in the purity of his divinity, the voice of God came to her. 'Your
faith has saved you; go in peace.' (Lk. 7:50)
·
In
spite of all these things accomplished by him in their presence, they did not
give him credence, but seized him and delivered him to be crucified. Having brought
him into the court of the High Priest, they treated him with contempt rather
than honor. Then the word of scripture was fulfilled. They brought evils upon
me instead of blessings, and hatred instead of my love.' (Ps. 108:5)
·
What then are the
evils which the people he created, the people who killed him, did to him? They are terrible
to describe or to hear. My tongue trembles, my eye weeps, my spirit groans, my
soul is distressed to utter them. It is God that they have seized, the Lord
that they have bound. They have pierced with nails the hands of them who
created them. They slapped the face of their Lord. They beat his head with
their fists. They placed a crown of thorns on his head. They dressed him in a
purple cloak. They gave him vinegar and gall. On this day they did all these
things to him. They crucified him with two thieves. One of them, who was
unworthy of the division of his divinity, said to the Lord, deriding him: 'If
you are the Christ, save yourself and us.' (Lk 23:39).
·
The other replied
rebuking him with indignation: 'Do you not fear God? We are receiving
the reward of our sins which we have committed, but this man has done nothing
wrong.' And he said, 'Jesus. remember me when you come into your kingdom.' And
Jesus said to him with great joy: 'Truly, I say to you, today you will be with
me in Paradise.' The gate of Paradise has been closed since the time when Adam
transgressed, but I will open it today, and receive you in it. Because you have
recognized the nobility of my head on the cross, you who have shared with me in
the suffering of the cross will be my companion in the joy of my kingdom. You
have glorified me in the presence of carnal men, in the presence of sinners. I
will therefore glorify you in the presence of the angels. You were fixed with
me on the cross, and you united yourself with me of your own free will. I will
therefore love you, and my Father will love you, and the angels will serve you
with my holy food. If you used once to be a companion of murderers, behold, I
who am the life of all have now made you a companion with me. You used once to
walk in the night with the sons of darkness; behold I who am the light of the
whole world have now made you walk with me. You used once to take counsel with
murderers; behold, I who am the Creator have made you a companion with me. 'All
these things I will pardon you because you have confessed my divinity in the
presence of those who have denied me. For they saw all the signs which I
performed, but did not believe in me. You, then, a rapacious robber, a
murderer, a brigand, a swindler, a plunderer have confessed that I am God. That
is why I have pardoned your many sins, because you have loved much (Lk. 7:47).
I will make you a citizen of Paradise. I will wash your body so that it will not
see corruption before I resurrect it with me on the third day and take you up
with me. The other who has denied me will see you enveloped in glory, but he
will be enveloped in pain and same. He will see you surrounded by light, but he
will be surrounded by darkness. He will see you in a state of joy and
happiness, but he will be in a state of weeping and groaning. He will see you
enjoying ease and benediction, but he will be suffering oppression and
malediction. He will see you refreshed by the angels, but he will be troubled
by the powers of darkness. And in the midst of intense cold the worm that never
rests will consume him. Not only did he not confess me, but after having denied
me he reviled me. 'For this reason all will receive according to their works.
For as I have already said to them explicitly and in public: Everyone who
acknowledges me before men, I will also acknowledge before my Father who is in
heaven; but whoever denies me before men, I also will deny before my Father who
is in heaven.' (Mt. 10:32-3).
So now, brethren, what torment the man who
denied the Lord brought upon himself? We should therefore watch over ourselves
that we should not be led astray, that for the sake of things of this life, we
should not be made strangers to him who has created us. Perhaps there is
someone today who is denying God for the sake of riches because the love of
money closes the eyes of those who are given to it. Such a person takes the
part of Judas, He has sold the Lord for thirty pieces of silver. It is
therefore good for us to direct our concerns towards the Lord since it is he
who takes care of us. Let us now turn to the goal proposed to us by the cross.
For the ladder which Jacob contemplated that was fixed to the ground and
reached up to heaven on which the angel of the Lord ascended and descended
(Gen. 28:12), is Our Lord Jesus Christ raised up on the wood of the cross.
PRAYER My cry to you today, O Lord, in tears is this: “Jesus, remember
me when you come into your Kingdom.” It is for this Kingdom that I fondly long.
It is the eternal home you have prepared for all those who seek you with
sincere hearts. “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what
God has prepared for those who love him”. Help me, Lord, as I struggle ahead on
my way to my eternal destiny. Lift the darkness from my path, and keep my eyes
raised to the heights!
“Lead, kindly Light,
amid the encircling gloom.
Lead thou me on.
The night is dark, and I am far from home.
Lead thou me on.
Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene; one step enough for me.”
·
Friday
around 2 PM
meditate on the TWELFTH STATION
TWELFTH STATION
The Mother of Jesus and the
Beloved Disciple at the foot of the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint John. 19:25-27
Standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother, and his mother’s
sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus saw his mother,
and the disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother: “Woman,
behold your son!” Then he said to the disciple: “Behold your mother!” And from
that hour the disciple took her to his own home.
MEDITATION In suffering we long for solidarity. Mother Mary
reminds us of supportive love and solidarity within a family, John of loyalty
within a community. Family cohesion, community bonds, ties of friendship –
these are essential for the flourishing of human beings. In an anonymous
society they grow weak. When they are missing, we become diminished persons. Again,
in Mary we do not notice even the least sign of resentment; not a word of
bitterness. The Virgin becomes an archetype of forgiveness in faith and hope.
She shows us the way to the future. Even those who would like to respond to
violent injustice with “violent justice” know that that is not the ultimate answer.
Forgiveness prompts hope. There are also historic injuries that often rankle in
the memories of societies for centuries. Unless we transmute our collective
anger into new energies of love through forgiveness, we perish together. When
healing comes through forgiveness, we light a lamp, announcing future
possibilities for the “life and well-being” of humanity.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, your Mother stood silently at your side in your
final agony. She who was unseen on occasions when you were acclaimed a great
prophet, stands beside you in your humiliation. May I have the courage to
remain loyal even where you are least recognized. Let me never be embarrassed
to belong to the “little flock”. Lord, let me remember that even those whom I
consider my “enemies” belong to the human family. If they treat me unfairly,
let my prayer be only: “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”
It may be in such a context that someone will suddenly recognize the true face
of Christ and cry out like the centurion: “Truly this man was the Son of God!”
·
Friday
around 3 PM
meditate on the THIRTEENTH STATION
THIRTEENTH STATION
Jesus dies on the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:46
Then Jesus, crying with a loud voice, said, “Father, into your
hands I commend my spirit!” And having said this, he breathed his last.
MEDITATION Jesus hands over his spirit to the Father in serene
abandonment. What his persecutors thought to be a moment of defeat proves, in
fact, to be a moment of triumph. When a prophet dies for the cause he stood
for, he gives the final proof of all that he has said. Christ’s death is
something more than that. It brings redemption. “In him we have redemption
through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses.” With that begins for me
a mystic journey: Christ draws me closer to him, until I shall fully belong to
him.
“As a deer longs for flowing
streams,
So my soul longs for you, O God…
When shall I come and behold the face of God?”
PRAYER Lord Jesus, it is for my own sins that you were nailed to the
Cross. Help me to gain a deeper understanding of the grievousness of my sins
and the immensity of your love. For “while we were still weak, Christ died for
the ungodly.” I admit my faults as the prophets did long ago:
“We have sinned and done wrong
and acted wickedly
and rebelled, turning aside
from your commandments and ordinances;
we have not listened to your servants the prophets….”
There was nothing in me to deserve your kindness. Thank you for
your immeasurable goodness to me. Help me to live for you, to shape my life
after you, to be joined to you and become a new creation.
“Christ be with me, Christ within
me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.”
·
Friday
before sunset
meditate on the FOURTEENTH STATION
FOURTEENTH STATION
Jesus is taken down from the
Cross and placed in the tomb
From the Gospel according to
Saint Mark. 15:46
Joseph bought a linen shroud, and taking him down, wrapped him
in the linen shroud, and laid him in a tomb which had been hewn out of the
rock; and he rolled a stone against the door of the tomb.
MEDITATION Tragedies make us ponder. A tsunami tells us that
life is serious. Hiroshima and Nagasaki remain pilgrim places. When death
strikes near, another world draws close. We then shed our illusions and have a
grasp of the deeper reality. People in ancient India prayed: “Lead me from the
unreal to the real, from darkness to light, from death to immortality.” After
Jesus left this world, Christians began to look back and interpret his life and
mission. They carried his message to the ends of the earth. And this message
itself is Jesus Christ, who is “the power of God and the wisdom of God”. It
says that the reality is Christ and that our ultimate destiny is to be with
him.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, enable us, as we press forward on life’s weary way,
to have a glimpse of our ultimate destiny. And when at last we cross over, we
will know that “death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no
more.” God will wipe away all tears from our eyes. It is this Good News that we
are eager to announce “in every way”, even in places where Christ has not been
heard of. For this we work hard. We work “night and day” and wear ourselves
out. Lord make us effective carriers of your Good News. “I know that my
Redeemer lives, and at last he will stand upon the earth; and in my flesh I
shall see God.”
·
Thursday
Evening
make a 1-hour adoration and meditate on the
FIRST; SECOND and THIRD STATIONS
Pope
Benedict XVI Stations of the Cross[1]
FIRST STATION
Jesus in agony in the Garden of Olives
From the Gospel
according to Saint Luke. 22:41-44
Jesus withdrew from
them about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and prayed, “Father, if you are
willing, remove this cup from me; nevertheless not my will but yours be done.”
And there appeared to him an angel from heaven strengthening him. And being in
agony he prayed more earnestly; and his sweat became like great drops of blood
falling down upon the ground.
MEDITATION Jesus was in agony. Grief and anguish came
upon him. The sin of all mankind weighed on him heavily. But the greater his
pain, the more fervently did he pray. Pain always remains a challenge to us. We
feel left alone. We forget to pray, and break down. Some even take their lives.
But if we turn to God, we grow spiritually strong and go out to help our
fellow-beings in trouble. Jesus continues to suffer in his persecuted
disciples. Pope Benedict XVI says that even in our times “the Church does not
lack martyrs”. Christ is in agony among us, and in our times. We pray for those
who suffer. The mystery of Christian suffering is that it has a redemptive
value. May the harassments that believers undergo complete in them the
sufferings of Christ that bring salvation.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, enable us to delve deeper into the
great “mystery of evil” and our own contribution to it. As sufferings came into
human life through sin, it was your plan that humanity be saved from sin
through suffering. May none of the little annoyances, humiliations, and
frustrations that we undergo in our daily lives and the great shocks that take
us by surprise, go to waste. Linked with your own agony, may the agonies we
endure be acceptable to you and bring us hope. Lord, teach us to be
compassionate, not only to the hungry, thirsty, sick, or those in some special
need, but also to those inclined to be rude, argumentative and hurtful. In this
way, as you have helped us in all our troubles, we may in turn “comfort those
who are in any affliction, with the comfort that we ourselves have received”.
SECOND STATION
Jesus is betrayed by Judas, and restrains
Peter from violence
From the Gospel
according to Saint Luke 22:47-50 and according to Saint Matthew 26:52.56
While Jesus was still
speaking, there came a crowd, and the man called Judas, one of the twelve, was
leading them. He drew near to Jesus to kiss him; but Jesus said to him, “Judas,
would you betray the Son of man with a kiss?” And when those who were about him
saw what would follow, they said, “Lord, shall we strike with the sword?” And
one of them struck the slave of the high priest and cut off his right ear. Then
Jesus said to him, “Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the
sword will perish by the sword.” Then all the disciples forsook him and fled.
MEDITATION It is one of his trusted friends that betrays
Jesus, and with a kiss. The way Jesus confronted violence has a message for our
times. Violence is suicidal, he tells Peter: it is not defeated by more
violence, but by a superior spiritual energy that reaches out in the form of
healing love. Jesus touches the High Priest’s slave and heals him. The violent man
today too may need a healing touch that comes from a love that transcends the
immediate issues. In times of conflict between persons, ethnic and religious
groups, nations, economic and political interests, Jesus says, confrontation
and violence are not the answer, but love, persuasion and reconciliation. Even
when we seem to fail in such efforts, we plant the seeds of peace which will
bear fruit in due time. The rightness of our cause is our strength.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, you consider us your friends, yet
we notice traces of infidelity in ourselves. We acknowledge our transgressions.
We are presumptuous at times and over-confident. And we fall. Let not avarice,
lust or pride take us by surprise. How thoughtlessly do we fly after ephemeral
satisfactions and untested ideas! Grant that we may not be tossed to and fro
and carried about by every wind of doctrine… but speaking the truth in love,
grow up in every way into Christ the head. May truth and sincerity of purpose
be our strength. Restrain, Lord, our impetuosity in situations of violence, as
you restrained Peter’s impulsive character. Keep us unruffled in spirit before
opposition and unfair treatment. Convince us that “A gentle answer quiets
anger” in our families, and that “gentleness” combined with “wisdom” restores
tranquility in society. “Lord, make me an instrument of Your peace.”
THIRD STATION
Jesus is held guilty by the
Sanhedrin
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew 26:62-66
And the High Priest stood up and said, “Have you no answer to
make? What is it that these men testify against you? But Jesus was silent. And
the High Priest said to him, “I adjure you by the living God, tell us if you
are the Christ, the Son of God.” Jesus said to him, “You have said so. But I
tell you, hereafter you will see the Son of man seated at the right hand of
Power, and coming on the clouds of heaven.” Then the High Priest tore his
robes, and said, “He has uttered blasphemy. What do we still need witnesses?
You have now heard his blasphemy. What is your judgement? They answered, “He
deserves death.”
MEDITATION In every land, there have been innocent persons who
suffered, people who died fighting for freedom, equality or justice. Those who
struggle on behalf of God’s little ones are promoting God’s own work. For he
presses for the rights of the weak and the oppressed. Whoever collaborates in
this work, in the spirit of Jesus, brings hope to the oppressed and offers a
corrective message to the evildoer himself. Jesus’ manner of struggling for
justice is not to rouse the collective anger of people against the opponent, so
that they are led into forms of greater injustice. On the contrary, it is to
challenge the foe with the rightness of one’s cause and evoke the good will of
the opponent in such a way that injustice is renounced through persuasion and a
change of heart. Mahatma Gandhi brought this teaching of Jesus on non-violence
into public life with amazing success.
PRAYER Lord, often we judge others in haste, indifferent to actual
realities and insensitive to people’s feelings! We develop stratagems of
self-justification and explain away the irresponsible manner in which we have
dealt with “the other”. Forgive us! When we are misjudged and ill-treated,
Lord, give us the inner serenity and self-confidence that your Son manifested
in the face of unjust treatment. Keep us from an aggressive response which goes
against your Spirit. On the contrary, help us to bring your powerful word of
forgiveness into situations of tension and anxiety, so that it may reveal its
dynamic power in history. “In His will is our peace.”
·
Friday
arise before the "cock crows" (2 hrs. before sunrise)
meditate on the FOURTH STATION
FOURTH STATION
Jesus is denied by Peter
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 22:54-62
Then they seized Jesus and led him away, bringing him into the
high priest’s house. Peter followed at a distance; and when they had kindled a
fire in the middle of the courtyard and sat down together, Peter sat among
them. Then a maid, seeing him as he sat in the light and gazing at him, said,
“This man was with him.” But he denied it, saying, “Woman, I do not know him.”
And a little later someone else saw him and said, “You also are one of them.”
But Peter said, “Man, I am not.” And after an interval of about an hour still
another insisted, saying, “Certainly this man was also with him; for he is a
Galilean.” But Peter said, “Man, I do not know what you are saying.” And
immediately, while he was still speaking, the cock crowed. And the Lord turned
and looked at Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how he had said
to him, “Before the cock crows today, you will deny me three times.” And he
went out and wept bitterly.
MEDITATION Peter claimed to be strong, but he broke down before
a servant girl. Human weakness takes us by surprise, and we collapse. That is
why Jesus asks us to watch and pray. He urges self-renunciation and closeness
to God. There is a rebellious “self” within us. We are often of “two minds”,
but we fail to recognize this inner inconsistency. Peter recognized it when his
eyes met the eyes of Jesus, and he wept. Later, Thomas, encountering the Risen
Lord, acknowledged his own faithlessness and believed. In the light of Christ,
Paul became aware of the inconsistency within himself, and he overcame it with
the Lord’s help. Going deeper still, he discovered: “It is no longer I who
live, but it is Christ who lives in me.”
PRAYER Lord, how easily do we allow a distance to grow between what we
profess to be and what we really are! How often do we fail to carry out our own
decisions, or even fulfil our most solemn promises! And as a result we often
hesitate to make any permanent commitment, even to you! We confess that we have
failed to bring into our life that inner discipline that is expected of any
adult person and required for the success of any human endeavor. Give
sturdiness to our inner determination; help us to bring every good work we have
begun to a successful conclusion. Enable us to stand firm, as mature and fully
convinced Christians, “in complete obedience to God’s will”.
·
Friday
after sunrise
meditate on the FIFTH STATION
FIFTH STATION
Jesus is judged by Pilate
A third time Pilate said to them, “Why, what evil has he done? I
have found in him no crime deserving death; I will therefore chastise him and
release him”. But they were urgent, demanding with loud cries that he should be
crucified. And their voices prevailed. So Pilate gave sentence that their
demand should be granted. He released the man who had been thrown into prison
for insurrection and murder, whom they asked for; but Jesus he delivered up to
their will.
MEDITATION It was not the rightness of an issue that mattered to
Pilate, but his professional interests. Such an attitude did not help him,
either in this case or in his later career. He was so unlike Jesus, whose inner
rectitude made him fearless. Nor was Pilate interested in the truth. He walks
away from Jesus exclaiming, “What is truth?” Such indifference to truth is not
uncommon these days. People are often concerned about what gives immediate
satisfaction. They are content with superficial answers. Decisions are made
based not on principles of integrity, but on opportunistic considerations.
Failing to make morally responsible options damages the vital interests of the
human person, and of the human family. We pray that the “spiritual and ethical
concepts” contained in the word of God will inspire the living norms of society
in our times.
PRAYER Lord, give us the courage to make responsible decisions when
rendering a public service. Bring probity (correctness) into public life and assist us
to be true to our conscience. Lord, you are the source of all Truth. Guide
us in our search for ultimate answers. Going beyond mere partial and incomplete
explanations, may we search for what is permanently true, beautiful and good. Lord,
keep us fearless before the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune”. When shadows
grow deep on life’s wearisome paths, and the dark night comes, enable us to
hearken to the teaching of your Apostle Paul: “Be watchful, stand firm in your
faith, be courageous, be strong.”
·
Friday
around 9 am
meditate on the SIXTH STATION
SIXTH STATION
Jesus is scourged and crowned
with thorns
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew. 27:26-30
Then Pilate, having scourged Jesus, delivered him to be
crucified. Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the praetorium,
and they gathered the whole battalion before him. And they stripped him and put
a scarlet robe upon him, and plaiting a crown of thorns they put it on his
head, and put a reed in his right hand. And kneeling before him they mocked
him, saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” And they spat upon him, and took the
reed and struck him on the head.
MEDITATION Inhumanity reaches new heights. Jesus is scourged and
crowned with thorns. History is full of hatred and wars. Even today we witness
acts of violence beyond belief: murder, violence to women and children,
kidnapping, extortion, ethnic conflict, urban violence, physical and mental torture,
violations of human rights. Jesus continues to suffer when believers are
persecuted, when justice is distorted in court, corruption gets rooted, unjust
structures grind the poor, minorities are suppressed, refugees and migrants are
ill-treated. Jesus’ garments are pulled away when the human person is put to
shame on the screen, when women are compelled to humiliate themselves, when
slum children go round the streets picking up crumbs. Who are the guilty? Let
us not point a finger at others, for we ourselves may have contributed a share
to these forms of inhumanity.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, we know that it is you who suffer when we cause pain
to each other and we remain indifferent. Your heart went out in compassion when
you saw the crowds “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd”. Give
me eyes that notice the needs of the poor and a heart that reaches out in love.
“Give me the strength to make my love fruitful in service.” Most of all, may we
share with the indigent your “word” of hope, your assurance of care. May “zeal
for your house” burn in us like a fire. Help us to bring the sunshine of your
joy into the lives of those who are trudging the path of despair.
·
Friday
around 10 am
meditate on the SEVENTH STATION
SEVENTH STATION
After Jesus is made an object
of fun, he is led out to be crucified
From the Gospel according to
Saint Matthew. 27:31
And when they had mocked him, they stripped him of the robe, and
put his own clothes on him, and led him away to be crucified.
MEDITATION Jesus, at whose name every knee in heaven and earth
bends, is made an object of fun. We are shocked to see to what levels of
brutality human beings can sink. Jesus is humiliated in new ways even today:
when things that are most Holy and Profound in the Faith are being trivialized;
the sense of the sacred is allowed to erode; the religious sentiment is
classified among unwelcome leftovers of antiquity. Everything in public life
risks being desacralized: persons, places, pledges, prayers, practices, words,
sacred writings, religious formulae, symbols, ceremonies. Our life together is
being increasingly secularized. Religious life grows diffident. Thus we see the
most momentous matters placed among trifles, and trivialities glorified. Values
and norms that held societies together and drew people to higher ideals are
laughed at and thrown overboard. Jesus continues to be ridiculed!
PRAYER We have faith, Lord, but not enough. Help us to have more. May
we never question or mock serious things in life like a cynic. Allow us not to
drift into the desert of godlessness. Enable us to perceive you in the gentle
breeze, see you in street corners, love you in the unborn child. God, enable us
to understand that on Tabor or Calvary, your Son is the Lord. Robed or stripped
of his garments, he is the Savior of the world. Make us attentive to his quiet
presences: in his “word”, in tabernacles, shrines, humble places, simple
persons, the life of the poor, laughter of children, whispering pines, rolling
hills, the tiniest living cell, the smallest atom, and the distant galaxies. May
we watch with wonder as he walks on the waters of the Rhine and the Nile and
the Tanganyika.
·
Friday
around 11 am
meditate on the EIGHTH and NINTH STATION
EIGHTH STATION
Jesus is helped by Simon of Cyrene
to carry the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:26
The soldiers led Jesus away, and as they were going, they met a
man from Cyrene named Simon who was coming into the city from the country. They
seized him, put the cross on him, and made him carry it behind Jesus.
MEDITATION In Simon of Cyrene, we have the proto-type of a
faithful disciple who takes up the Cross and follows Christ. He is not unlike
millions of Christians from a humble background, with deep attachment to
Christ. No glamour, no sophistication, but profound faith. Such believers keep
rising on the soil of Africa, Asia and the distant islands. Vocations arise
from their midst. Simon reminds us of small communities and tribes with their
characteristic commitment to the common good, deep rootedness in ethical values
and openness to the Gospel. They deserve attention and care. The Lord does not
desire that “one of these little ones should perish”. In Simon we discover the
sacredness of the ordinary and the greatness of what looks small. For the
smallest has some mystic relationship with the greatest, and the ordinary with
the most extraordinary!
PRAYER Lord, it is your wonderful plan to lift up the lowly and sustain
the poor. Strengthen your Church in her service to deprived communities: the
least privileged, the marginalized, slum dwellers, the rural poor, the
undernourished, untouchables, the handicapped, people given to addictions. May
the example of your servant, Mother Teresa of Kolkata, inspire us to dedicate
more of our energies and resources to the cause of the “poorest of the poor”.
May we one day hear these words from Jesus: “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 naked and you clothed me; I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison
and you came to me.”
NINTH STATION
Jesus meets the women of
Jerusalem
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:27-28
And there followed him a great multitude of the people, and of
women who bewailed and lamented him. But Jesus, turning to them, said:
“Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for
your children.”
MEDITATION Before the weeping women, Jesus is self-forgetful.
His anxiety is not about his pains, but about the tragic future that awaits
them and their children. The destinies of societies are intimately linked to
the wellbeing of their women. Wherever women are held in low esteem or their
role remains diminished, societies fail to rise to their true potentiality. In the
same way, wherever their responsibility to the rising generation is neglected,
ignored, or marginalized, the future of that society becomes uncertain. There
are many societies in the world where women fail to receive a fair deal. Christ
must be weeping for them. There are societies too that are thoughtless about
their future. Christ must be weeping for their children. Wherever there is
unconcern for the future, through the overuse of resources, the degradation of
the environment, the oppression of women, the neglect of family values, the
ignoring of ethical norms, the abandonment of religious traditions, Jesus must
be telling people: “Do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your
children.”
PRAYER Lord, you are the Master of history. And yet you wanted our
collaboration in realizing your plans. Help us to play a responsible role in
society: leaders in their communities, parents in their families, educators and
health-workers among those who need to be served, communicators in the world of
information. Arouse in us a sense of mission in what we do, a deep sense of
responsibility to each other, to society, to our common future and to you. For
you have placed the destinies of our communities and of humanity itself into
our hands. Lord, do not turn away from us when you see women humiliated or your
image disfigured in the human person; when we interfere with life-systems,
weaken the nurturing power of nature, pollute running streams or the deep blue
seas or the Northern snows. Save us from cruel indifference to our common
future, and do not let us drag our civilization down the path of decline.
·
Friday
around NOON
meditate on the TENTH STATION
TENTH STATION
Jesus is crucified
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke 23:33-37 and according to Saint Matthew. 27:46
There they crucified him, and the criminals, one on the right
and one on the left. And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them; for they know not
what they do.” And they cast lots to divide his garments. And the people stood
by, watching; but the rulers scoffed at him, saying, “He saved others; let him
save himself, if he is the Christ of God, his Chosen One!” The soldiers also
mocked him, coming up and offering him vinegar, and saying, “If you are the
King of the Jews, save yourself!” And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a
loud voice, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?”, that is, “My God, my God, why have
you forsaken me?”
MEDITATION The sufferings of Jesus reach a climax. He had stood
fearlessly before Pilate. He had endured the mistreatment of the Roman
soldiers. He had preserved his calm under the scourge and the crowning with
thorns. On the Cross itself, he seemed untouched by a shower of insults. He had
no word of complaint, no desire to retort. But then, finally, a moment comes
when he breaks down. His strength can stand no more. He feels abandoned even by
his Father! Experience tells us that even the sturdiest man can descend to the
depths of despair. Frustrations accumulate, anger and resentment pile up. Bad
health, bad news, bad luck, bad treatment – all can come together. It may have
happened to us. It is at such moments we need to remember that Jesus never
fails us. He cried to the Father. May we too cry out to the Father, who
unfailingly comes to our rescue in all our distress, whenever we call upon him!
PRAYER Lord, when clouds gather on the horizon and everything seems
lost, when we find no friend to stand by us and hope slips from our hands,
teach us to trust in you, who will surely come to our rescue. May the
experience of inner pain and darkness teach us the great truth that in you
nothing is lost, that even our sins – once we have repented of them – come to
serve a purpose, like dry wood in the cold of winter. Lord, you have a
master design beneath the working of the universe and the progress of history.
Open our eyes to the rhythms and patterns in the movements of the stars;
balance and proportion in the inner structure of elements; interrelatedness and
complementarity in nature; progress and purpose in the march of history;
correction and compensation in our personal stories. It is this harmony that
you constantly keep restoring, despite the painful imbalances that we bring
about. In you even the greatest loss is a gain. Christ’s death, in fact, points
to resurrection.
·
Friday
around 1 PM
meditate on the ELEVENTH STATION
ELEVENTH STATION
Jesus promises his Kingdom to
the Good Thief
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:39-43
One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying, “Are
you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying,
“Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation?
And we indeed justly; for we are receiving the due reward of our deeds; but
this man has done nothing wrong.” And he said, “Jesus, remember me when you
come into your kingdom.” And he said to him, “Truly, I say to you, today you
will be with me in Paradise.”
MEDITATION It is not eloquence that convinces and converts. In
the case of Peter, it is a look of love; in the case of the Good Thief, it is
unresentful serenity in suffering. Conversion takes place like a miracle. God
opens your eyes. You recognize his presence and action. You surrender! Opting
for Christ is always a mystery. Why does one make a definitive choice for
Christ, even in the face of trouble, or death? Why do Christians flourish in
persecuted places? We shall never know. But it happens over and over again. If
a person who has abandoned his faith comes across the real face of Christ, he
will be stunned by what he actually sees, and may surrender like Thomas: “My
Lord and my God!” It is a privilege to unveil the face of Christ to people. It
is even a greater joy to discover – or rediscover -him. “Your face, O Lord, do
I seek. Do not hide your face from me.”
Theophilus
of Alexandria: 'Crucifixion and the Good Thief'.[2]
The sun of righteousness appeared in the east and gave light to those who were in the darkness and in the shadow of death (Lk. 1:79) ...The powerful lion sprang up out of the wood; all the wild beasts hid in their dens…This, if you like, is the way of Our Lord Jesus Christ, when he saw the real enemy of the whole human race, who is the devil. For the devil invaded the whole earth, and afflicted everyone with many kinds of sins, which he spreads with these great scourges, namely, idolatry, robbery, vanity, fornication, theft, murder, slander, licentiousness, envy, hatred, contempt, anger, sorcery, pollution, fraud, arrogance, perjury, falsehood, corruption, prostitution, deceit and whatever is similar in them. These are the traps which the devil set for humanity, until he brought it to perdition and dispersed it. Well now. Let us consider in what way Christ the king made war against the devil until he released our souls from him and set them free. Let us begin, then, to penetrate the great treasure house full of the fruits of life.
The sun of righteousness appeared in the east and gave light to those who were in the darkness and in the shadow of death (Lk. 1:79) ...The powerful lion sprang up out of the wood; all the wild beasts hid in their dens…This, if you like, is the way of Our Lord Jesus Christ, when he saw the real enemy of the whole human race, who is the devil. For the devil invaded the whole earth, and afflicted everyone with many kinds of sins, which he spreads with these great scourges, namely, idolatry, robbery, vanity, fornication, theft, murder, slander, licentiousness, envy, hatred, contempt, anger, sorcery, pollution, fraud, arrogance, perjury, falsehood, corruption, prostitution, deceit and whatever is similar in them. These are the traps which the devil set for humanity, until he brought it to perdition and dispersed it. Well now. Let us consider in what way Christ the king made war against the devil until he released our souls from him and set them free. Let us begin, then, to penetrate the great treasure house full of the fruits of life.
·
This
is the great holy mystery of the wood of the cross, on which the True God,
Jesus Christ, mounted out of love. When he descended into this world, he came
to the people of Israel and preached to them saying: 'Repent for the kingdom of
Heaven is at hand.' (Mt. 4:17)
·
But
they paid no heed to his holy counsels. After this he performed all the signs
of his divinity in their presence, miracles without number. He made the blind
see, the lame walk and the deaf hear. He healed lepers. He brought the dead
back to life. He drove out demons. He made paralytics stand on their feet and
forgave their sins. He made tax gatherers repent. He straightened vainglorious
hands. He evangelized the poor. He remitted the sins of adulteresses and purified
them with his divinity, restoring them to a virginal state. It was because an
adulterous woman was made worthy of this great grace that her hands anointed
the feet of him who had created her. (Lk. 7 37-8) From the moment she
participated in the purity of his divinity, the voice of God came to her. 'Your
faith has saved you; go in peace.' (Lk. 7:50)
·
In
spite of all these things accomplished by him in their presence, they did not
give him credence, but seized him and delivered him to be crucified. Having brought
him into the court of the High Priest, they treated him with contempt rather
than honor. Then the word of scripture was fulfilled. They brought evils upon
me instead of blessings, and hatred instead of my love.' (Ps. 108:5)
·
What then are the
evils which the people he created, the people who killed him, did to him? They are terrible
to describe or to hear. My tongue trembles, my eye weeps, my spirit groans, my
soul is distressed to utter them. It is God that they have seized, the Lord
that they have bound. They have pierced with nails the hands of them who
created them. They slapped the face of their Lord. They beat his head with
their fists. They placed a crown of thorns on his head. They dressed him in a
purple cloak. They gave him vinegar and gall. On this day they did all these
things to him. They crucified him with two thieves. One of them, who was
unworthy of the division of his divinity, said to the Lord, deriding him: 'If
you are the Christ, save yourself and us.' (Lk 23:39).
·
The other replied
rebuking him with indignation: 'Do you not fear God? We are receiving
the reward of our sins which we have committed, but this man has done nothing
wrong.' And he said, 'Jesus. remember me when you come into your kingdom.' And
Jesus said to him with great joy: 'Truly, I say to you, today you will be with
me in Paradise.' The gate of Paradise has been closed since the time when Adam
transgressed, but I will open it today, and receive you in it. Because you have
recognized the nobility of my head on the cross, you who have shared with me in
the suffering of the cross will be my companion in the joy of my kingdom. You
have glorified me in the presence of carnal men, in the presence of sinners. I
will therefore glorify you in the presence of the angels. You were fixed with
me on the cross, and you united yourself with me of your own free will. I will
therefore love you, and my Father will love you, and the angels will serve you
with my holy food. If you used once to be a companion of murderers, behold, I
who am the life of all have now made you a companion with me. You used once to
walk in the night with the sons of darkness; behold I who am the light of the
whole world have now made you walk with me. You used once to take counsel with
murderers; behold, I who am the Creator have made you a companion with me. 'All
these things I will pardon you because you have confessed my divinity in the
presence of those who have denied me. For they saw all the signs which I
performed, but did not believe in me. You, then, a rapacious robber, a
murderer, a brigand, a swindler, a plunderer have confessed that I am God. That
is why I have pardoned your many sins, because you have loved much (Lk. 7:47).
I will make you a citizen of Paradise. I will wash your body so that it will not
see corruption before I resurrect it with me on the third day and take you up
with me. The other who has denied me will see you enveloped in glory, but he
will be enveloped in pain and same. He will see you surrounded by light, but he
will be surrounded by darkness. He will see you in a state of joy and
happiness, but he will be in a state of weeping and groaning. He will see you
enjoying ease and benediction, but he will be suffering oppression and
malediction. He will see you refreshed by the angels, but he will be troubled
by the powers of darkness. And in the midst of intense cold the worm that never
rests will consume him. Not only did he not confess me, but after having denied
me he reviled me. 'For this reason all will receive according to their works.
For as I have already said to them explicitly and in public: Everyone who
acknowledges me before men, I will also acknowledge before my Father who is in
heaven; but whoever denies me before men, I also will deny before my Father who
is in heaven.' (Mt. 10:32-3).
So now, brethren, what torment the man who
denied the Lord brought upon himself? We should therefore watch over ourselves
that we should not be led astray, that for the sake of things of this life, we
should not be made strangers to him who has created us. Perhaps there is
someone today who is denying God for the sake of riches because the love of
money closes the eyes of those who are given to it. Such a person takes the
part of Judas, He has sold the Lord for thirty pieces of silver. It is
therefore good for us to direct our concerns towards the Lord since it is he
who takes care of us. Let us now turn to the goal proposed to us by the cross.
For the ladder which Jacob contemplated that was fixed to the ground and
reached up to heaven on which the angel of the Lord ascended and descended
(Gen. 28:12), is Our Lord Jesus Christ raised up on the wood of the cross.
PRAYER My cry to you today, O Lord, in tears is this: “Jesus, remember
me when you come into your Kingdom.” It is for this Kingdom that I fondly long.
It is the eternal home you have prepared for all those who seek you with
sincere hearts. “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what
God has prepared for those who love him”. Help me, Lord, as I struggle ahead on
my way to my eternal destiny. Lift the darkness from my path, and keep my eyes
raised to the heights!
“Lead, kindly Light,
amid the encircling gloom.
Lead thou me on.
The night is dark, and I am far from home.
Lead thou me on.
Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene; one step enough for me.”
amid the encircling gloom.
Lead thou me on.
The night is dark, and I am far from home.
Lead thou me on.
Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene; one step enough for me.”
·
Friday
around 2 PM
meditate on the TWELFTH STATION
TWELFTH STATION
The Mother of Jesus and the
Beloved Disciple at the foot of the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint John. 19:25-27
Standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother, and his mother’s
sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus saw his mother,
and the disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother: “Woman,
behold your son!” Then he said to the disciple: “Behold your mother!” And from
that hour the disciple took her to his own home.
MEDITATION In suffering we long for solidarity. Mother Mary
reminds us of supportive love and solidarity within a family, John of loyalty
within a community. Family cohesion, community bonds, ties of friendship –
these are essential for the flourishing of human beings. In an anonymous
society they grow weak. When they are missing, we become diminished persons. Again,
in Mary we do not notice even the least sign of resentment; not a word of
bitterness. The Virgin becomes an archetype of forgiveness in faith and hope.
She shows us the way to the future. Even those who would like to respond to
violent injustice with “violent justice” know that that is not the ultimate answer.
Forgiveness prompts hope. There are also historic injuries that often rankle in
the memories of societies for centuries. Unless we transmute our collective
anger into new energies of love through forgiveness, we perish together. When
healing comes through forgiveness, we light a lamp, announcing future
possibilities for the “life and well-being” of humanity.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, your Mother stood silently at your side in your
final agony. She who was unseen on occasions when you were acclaimed a great
prophet, stands beside you in your humiliation. May I have the courage to
remain loyal even where you are least recognized. Let me never be embarrassed
to belong to the “little flock”. Lord, let me remember that even those whom I
consider my “enemies” belong to the human family. If they treat me unfairly,
let my prayer be only: “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”
It may be in such a context that someone will suddenly recognize the true face
of Christ and cry out like the centurion: “Truly this man was the Son of God!”
·
Friday
around 3 PM
meditate on the THIRTEENTH STATION
THIRTEENTH STATION
Jesus dies on the Cross
From the Gospel according to
Saint Luke. 23:46
Then Jesus, crying with a loud voice, said, “Father, into your
hands I commend my spirit!” And having said this, he breathed his last.
MEDITATION Jesus hands over his spirit to the Father in serene
abandonment. What his persecutors thought to be a moment of defeat proves, in
fact, to be a moment of triumph. When a prophet dies for the cause he stood
for, he gives the final proof of all that he has said. Christ’s death is
something more than that. It brings redemption. “In him we have redemption
through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses.” With that begins for me
a mystic journey: Christ draws me closer to him, until I shall fully belong to
him.
“As a deer longs for flowing
streams,
So my soul longs for you, O God…
When shall I come and behold the face of God?”
So my soul longs for you, O God…
When shall I come and behold the face of God?”
PRAYER Lord Jesus, it is for my own sins that you were nailed to the
Cross. Help me to gain a deeper understanding of the grievousness of my sins
and the immensity of your love. For “while we were still weak, Christ died for
the ungodly.” I admit my faults as the prophets did long ago:
“We have sinned and done wrong
and acted wickedly
and rebelled, turning aside
from your commandments and ordinances;
we have not listened to your servants the prophets….”
and rebelled, turning aside
from your commandments and ordinances;
we have not listened to your servants the prophets….”
There was nothing in me to deserve your kindness. Thank you for
your immeasurable goodness to me. Help me to live for you, to shape my life
after you, to be joined to you and become a new creation.
“Christ be with me, Christ within
me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.”
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.”
·
Friday
before sunset
meditate on the FOURTEENTH STATION
FOURTEENTH STATION
Jesus is taken down from the
Cross and placed in the tomb
From the Gospel according to
Saint Mark. 15:46
Joseph bought a linen shroud, and taking him down, wrapped him
in the linen shroud, and laid him in a tomb which had been hewn out of the
rock; and he rolled a stone against the door of the tomb.
MEDITATION Tragedies make us ponder. A tsunami tells us that
life is serious. Hiroshima and Nagasaki remain pilgrim places. When death
strikes near, another world draws close. We then shed our illusions and have a
grasp of the deeper reality. People in ancient India prayed: “Lead me from the
unreal to the real, from darkness to light, from death to immortality.” After
Jesus left this world, Christians began to look back and interpret his life and
mission. They carried his message to the ends of the earth. And this message
itself is Jesus Christ, who is “the power of God and the wisdom of God”. It
says that the reality is Christ and that our ultimate destiny is to be with
him.
PRAYER Lord Jesus, enable us, as we press forward on life’s weary way,
to have a glimpse of our ultimate destiny. And when at last we cross over, we
will know that “death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no
more.” God will wipe away all tears from our eyes. It is this Good News that we
are eager to announce “in every way”, even in places where Christ has not been
heard of. For this we work hard. We work “night and day” and wear ourselves
out. Lord make us effective carriers of your Good News. “I know that my
Redeemer lives, and at last he will stand upon the earth; and in my flesh I
shall see God.”
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