Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Why Suffer

 

 

Some years ago, I was talking with my mother on the phone.

I asked, How’s it going with Dad?

She said, I heard him talking in the hallway earlier.

I went out to check, and he was standing there in the dark hall.

I asked him what he was doing.

He was standing there by the crucifix and he said, “I’m talking to Jesus.”

 

That might not seem too odd.

Except that Dad could seldom put two words together.

And he couldn’t tell you anybody’s name, or what any things were called.

He’d been suffering from Alzheimers for over ten years.

The whole family suffered along with him.

Especially my then-86-year-old mother with her bad back and bad knees,

Who insisted that she was the only one who could take care of him.

 

We were no different from other families or other people.

Some suffer more, some suffer less, but we all suffer.

We suffer from physical diseases and disabilities and injuries.

We suffer from mental and emotional and relationship problems.

From financial hardships and a seemingly endless list of other problems.

Today, we’re in the midst of crippling divisiveness, pandemic and war.

 

It makes us ask, Why do we have to suffer?

That’s a hard question to answer.

Of course, we know that man’s sin brought suffering into our world.

And it’s only in heaven that that we’ll finally have an end to suffering.

 

But why do the good suffer as much as, or more than, the bad?

Why did even Jesus have to suffer?

The apostles in today’s Gospel had to be reminded of that again.

When James and John make their brash request to sit with him in glory.

Jesus asks them if they can drink the cup that he must drink.

That cup of suffering so dreadful that even he would later pray to avoid it.

Father, if possible, let this cup pass from me. 

Yet not my will but Thine be done.

 

Why did God choose to have Jesus suffer to redeem us?

God could have redeemed us with any simple act, with a simple thought

Instead, Jesus was sent to set the ultimate example for suffering.

To push on to Jerusalem 

With the terrible knowledge of what awaited him there.

Knowing he would be mocked, scourged and crucified.

As we see from the crucifix hanging in front of us ,

And the stations of the cross hung around these walls,

He went through extreme suffering—both physically and emotionally.

And he bore that suffering with acceptance and surrender of will.

Given the natural human dread of suffering,

Jesus’ acceptance of his suffering certainly shows how much he loves us.

 

But there’s still that nagging question, Why do we have to suffer?

The answer is elusive—deep, complex, mysterious.

We might consider the approach that Professor Irwin Corey devised

For analyzing such difficult questions.

That twentieth century comedian/philosopher would have said:

Why do we have to suffer? ...

We must realize that this is a two-part question.

So let’s delve into the first part: Why?

 

This is a question that man has struggled with since history began—Why?

Thinkers on the level of the great philosophers and theologians,

Have spent lifetimes trying to answer it.

Socrates, Aristotle, Plato and those before them.

Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas and those after them.

Learned treatises could be written on the question of Why.

But a fully satisfactory answer would still elude us.

There’s little chance that we could answer the question of Why

In any finite amount of time.

So, let’s move on and delve into the second part of our question:

Do we have to suffer? …

Well—Yes!

 

That tongue-in-cheek analysis has its flaws—but it does lead to a truth.

We may wonder Why, we may want to know Why

But the simple, inescapable fact, regardless of Why,

Is that we do all have to suffer.

 

So how can we make the best of that?

We can do whatever we can to avoid or ease suffering—ours and other’s.

Whatever legitimate action or medication or therapy might help.

And then we can dedicate the remaining suffering as redemptive suffering.

We can consciously join our suffering to Jesus’ suffering.

Offer it up-- 

As a supplement to the suffering Jesus went through to redeem us.

That doesn’t mean Jesus’ suffering was insufficient for redemption.

But since we’re part of the mystical body of Christ, 

Our suffering is his suffering.

And we can offer it as part of God’s mysterious plan of redemption.

 

I don’t know what my father said, 

Standing there in the hallway talking to Jesus.

I don’t know if he’d ever heard of redemptive suffering.

But the fact that he mentioned Jesus showed that, 

In the midst of his suffering,

There, seemingly alone in his lost mental world, 

Jesus was still in there with him.

 

If we consciously join ourselves to Jesus in our suffering.

We can recognize it as redemptive suffering.

We’ll better appreciate the value of our own suffering.

We’ll more easily bear it.

Because we’ll know that we’re not suffering alone.

Jesus is right in there with us.

Sunday, May 16, 2021

God Spell

 (Anglo-Saxon for Good News, root of the English word Gospel)



Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Happy Ascension Thursday.

This is one of our truly major feasts—a Solemnity.

It’s one of only six Holy Days of Obligation in the U.S.

Ranking right up there with the Feasts of:

Mary Mother of God, the Assumption, All Saints Day,

The Immaculate Conception, and Christmas.

It’s also the subject of the second Glorious Mystery of the Rosary.

 

According to today’s first reading, from the Acts of the Apostles,

Jesus remained on earth for 40 days after his resurrection.

So, given that guidance, the Church set the celebration of his Ascension into Heaven on the 40th day after Easter.

And, since Easter is always celebrated on a Sunday,

That 40th day always falls on a Thursday.

So, for us older folks it was Ascension Thursday most of our lives.

But in 1999, many dioceses moved the celebration to Sunday.

That doesn’t lessen the importance of this Feast in any way.

The Church has always held Sunday to be the holiest day of the week.

 

The Ascension is packed with significance.

It was a moment of transition—major, radical, change.

It was a moment for those disciples, and now for us,

To be flooded with the realization

Of all that Jesus accomplished in his brief ministry.

The teachings, the examples, the miracles, the revelations.

All those things that together form the Good News.

 

We heard not just one, but two, accounts of the Ascension today.

Luke ended his Gospel with his account of the Ascension,

And he began the Acts of the Apostles with a continuation of that,

Which we just heard.

And then, in today’s Gospel, we heard Mark’s account.

 

In both, Jesus is leaving.

He'll no longer be with the disciples in human-body form.

He's tried over the past many months to prepare them for that.

He’s taught them all that they need to know.

He’s boiled down the 600 Jewish laws and the 10 Commandments

To just two Great Commandments.

Love God, and love your neighbor as yourself.

 

He’s revealed to them the inner life of God—the Trinity.

So much of what we know about God was unknown, unknowable,

Until Jesus revealed it. 

He’s proved to them that he and the Father are one—he is God.

He’s shown them the Father, and taught them to pray.

Told them that his Father loves them, just as he himself loves them.

That his Father invites them too, to call him Father—even Daddy.

By his own death, he’s shown them just how much God loves them.

By his resurrection he’s shown them victory over suffering and death.

And assured them that they too can share in that victory.

 

He's told them that he'll come back at the end of time.

He's told them that they'll join him in Heaven.

That his Father's house has many rooms.

 

He’s told them that he'll be with them until the end of the age.

He’ll remain present in the Church—that community that he founded.

He’ll be present with them in the Eucharist that he’s given them.

This is my body, this is my blood, do this in memory of me.

He and the Father will actually dwell within us.

He’ll be present in the Holy Spirit who he’ll send in his place.

(We'll celebrate that next Sunday, Pentecost, the descent of the Holy Spirit.)

 

All of that Good News, and more, is pulled together in the Ascension.

Because Jesus calls all of this to mind,

When he tells his disciples that they are his witnesses.

And  he gives them the Great Commission

To spread the Gospel—all that Good News—

To every creature, throughout the whole world.

 

And as Mark tells us, they did—they went and preached everywhere.

And the Lord worked with them, confirming their words by signs.

That’s how we’ve come to know the Good News.

It was passed down to us in oral and written transmissions,

By billions of believers throughout a hundred generations.

 

As beneficiaries of their witnessing, we’re now called to give witness.

By how we act.

By what we say.

By how we treat others.

 

The world deserves to share in our knowledge of the Good News. 

To know that there truly is an all-powerful God.

An all-loving, all-merciful, all-just, God who loves each of us dearly.

And wants us to share eternal happiness with Him in Heaven.

That’s quite a revelation!

Won’t that all-powerful God get what he wants?

Will he let his Word return to Him empty?

We can’t let ourselves presume that we’ve all got it made.

That we and those we love are all going straight to Heaven.

But, with a God like that, we can certainly have great hope.

 

Let us always look forward to that Heavenly reunion.

And as witnesses, as carriers of the Good News,

Let’s always try to act on our calling.

Let’s Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by our lives.

 

                                                              The Ascension

Mk 16:15-20