FAUSTO GOMEZ OP.

The Holy Year of Mercy invites Christians to be merciful. Mercy, or compassion for the needy, is a necessary expression of love of neighbor, which includes comforting the suffering. In the heart of the Sermon on the Mount Jesus gives the Second Beatitude: “Blessed are those who mourn for they shall be comforted” (Mt 5:4), which means to be sorry for the suffering and miseries in the world and for our miseries and sins. Comforting those who suffer is a spiritual work of mercy.

Our humanity is a wounded humanity. So much suffering in our world: the lonely elderly, the battered wife, the abandoned child, the family of refugees, the persecuted, tortured and killed, the youth surviving a meaningless life, the “different” among us who are alienated, new slaves …  

How may God be a tender mother and allow so much misery and poverty and violence and injustice? Suffering is truly mysterious, mysterium doloris!  How do we relate suffering to an all-good and omnipotent God? And the perennial question: Why do innocent children suffer? Other heart-breaking questions are these: Why the terrorist massacres? “Why the Holocaust?” Why, Lord, did you remain silent? How could you tolerate all this?” (Benedict XVI, Address at Auschwitz-Birkenau: May 28, 2006).

Certainly the God of our Lord Jesus Christ is not a vengeful, nor a masochistic God, but the compassionate Father of the prodigal son, the Abba of his Son Jesus Christ, who died on the Cross! We believe that God is love (I Jn 4:16), and that there is heaven.  Suffering is part of the project of human life, which is realized in love. God does not rejoice in our infirmities; in fact, in his Son Jesus Christ, he shared suffering with us. Our God is not an insensitive God. Jesus, God and man, wept over Jerusalem, the beautiful city that some years later would be totally destroyed (Lk 19:41-48). Jesus weeps seeing the terrible sufferings of so many people in the world! The only answer to those questions is Christ on the cross. Out of love, Christ died for all humanity. But He did not do away with suffering and death: “He came down from heaven to take them upon himself; he did not do away with them, he did something more: he gave them meaning and lit them up from within, transfiguring them and making them God-like” (Charles Journet). (Where was God on September 11, 2001, on March 11, 2004, On December 26, 2004, on November 13, 2015…? He was nailed to the Cross! He is on the cross with those who suffer).

Suffering may become a path to meet God. With God’s grace and our cooperation, the cross may be turned from a place of pain and suffering into “an appointment with the Crucified Lord” (J.M. Cabodevilla). The saints not only bore their sufferings patiently but also joyfully – for the love of God. They even asked the Lord to increase their sufferings so that they would be united, in a closer manner, to the Crucified Lord, and thus become co-redeemers with Him. The deepest meaning of the mystery of suffering is co-redemptive suffering (Col 1:24).

The mystery of evil continues! And in the midst of suffering, the mystery of an omnipotent and merciful God! We know that God loves us, “God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son.” Moreover, we believe Jesus died on the cross to show us the evilness of sin: Sin is darkness, night, and unhappiness: a betrayal of God’s love and of the blood of Christ shed for us. Facing those sufferings, we are asked by our humanity and our faith to help others carry their cross not with sermons, but with compassion. One of the gravest things one can do in life is to make others suffer (A. Camus). Hereafter, I reflect on the suffering of our loved ones and of our own suffering.

Pope Francis has often used the image of a field hospital after a battle and applied to a merciful Church. She is the tender mother who cares for the wounded. She cares in particular for her children who are sick, or abandoned in many places.

As Christians, we have to love the neighbor. Who is my neighbor? In the lovely Parable of the Samaritan, Jesus asked the teacher of the law: Who among the three in the parable is your neighbor? The teacher answered: “The one who showed mercy” (Cf. Lk 10:25-37). Blessed Paul VI said at closing of Vatican II that the model of the spirituality of the Council was the story of the Good Samaritan.

             How do we face the suffering of others?  To face properly the pain and suffering of others, we need to face properly pain and suffering in our own life. If we are not able to integrate our own sufferings in the story of our personal life, we will have a hard time in helping others bear their sufferings in a humane and/or Christian way.

How do we face our own personal suffering? The Psalmist says: “It is good for me that I have been afflicted” (Ps 119:71).We try to face our sufferings and pains with courage, hope and respect for life – and prayer. With courage: we try hard to be patient and to persevere in patience: fortitude is the cardinal virtue that helps us with patience and perseverance to carry the cross of life – our pains and sufferings. We struggle to carry our cross with hope: God cares for us, is in us and in front of us as our hope. We bear our sufferings respecting our life, which belongs to God, up to its end – against the shortcuts of euthanasia and also against the undue prolongation of dying through useless and extremely burdensome treatments. As we fix our eyes on Jesus on the Cross, we also think of our own cross: you know that you will be saved on your cross, and I know that I will be saved on mine! “If anyone wants to be my disciple let him deny himself, take up his cross and follow me.” Jesus, our savior and friend, adds: “My yoke is light,” “come to me all who are burdened and I will give you rest.” No wonder, for the saints, the truly happy ones, when the cross comes, it is the Lord who comes!

How do we face the suffering of others? We face the sufferings of others with compassion and in solidarity with them – and with prayer. The suffering persons need not only pain relief, but also empathetic solidarity. In general, healthcare givers try to free the patient from pain, while the significant others – immediate family, friends, and also the members of the healthcare team, especially physicians and nurses – provide support, protection, security, and “a warm heart” so that patients may be able to suffer human weakness in solidarity: homo patiens and homo compatiens. Philosopher E. Levinas reminds us that our answer to the suffering of the other is compassion, not explanation. True compassion, however, is not expressed by cooperating in euthanasia unjustly called mercy killing! How may killing be merciful? Compassion implies solidarity, or justice plus love of neighbor, a love that respects the dignity and rights of the human person, including the fundamental right to life. God is the Lord of life and death. We are only stewards.

            Following Christ, the Good Samaritan – the best paradigm of the healing and caring ministry -, we all have to be at the side of those who suffer in our families and communities, to help them bear their suffering, and not to increase it! In his play Caligula, Albert Camus put these words in the mouth of Scipio: “Caligula often told me that the only mistake one makes in life is causing suffering to others.”  We have to be at the side of those who suffer in a nonjudgmental, not paternalistic, but understanding, respectful, merciful and prayerful attitude, as they pass through different psychological stages, like the classical five of Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

 Another point we must not forget: The sick around us evangelize the healthy. The suffering of others, particularly of our loved ones, calls us to reflecting on the meaning of life and of suffering. The sick invite us silently to meditate on the gifts of our health and relationships, on God, on our own sufferings, on the finitude of our life and on our constant need to be united to the passion, death and resurrection of Christ.

            Is there a pedagogy of suffering? When suffering knocks on our door, what ought we to do? I wish to share with you my own recipe for personal suffering and of the loved ones.

We do not blame God. God permits but does not like our suffering. In Christ, He assumed our suffering, and He accompanies us.

We ask God to help us either by eliminating our suffering or pain, or by aiding us to bear it. We believe in God the Father who loves each one of us   and we pray – like Jesus – for help: “My Father, if this (passion, crucifixion) cannot pass me by without my drinking it, your will be done” (Mt 26:42).

United to the Crucified Lord, we try to carry our cross patiently; perhaps limping at times, perhaps complaining a bit! “God does not give more suffering than what can be endured, and, in the first place, He gives patience” (St. Teresa of Avila)

We try to carry our cross, our suffering joyful in hope (Rom 12:12). “Blessed are the sorrowful, they shall be consoled” (Mt 5:4).

We bear our sufferings out of love: “The way we came to understand love was that he laid down his life for us; we too must lay down our lives for our brothers” (I Jn 3:16).

And from beginning to end, we pray. We ask the good Lord to remedy our weakness, our impatience, our irritation, our depression, our hopelessness …

If we follow this recipe, we shall love the cross: not for its own sake but because of the Crucified Lord. Then, our suffering – joined to Christ’s – becomes redemptive suffering: “It makes me happy to suffer for you, as I am suffering now, and in my own body to do what I can to make up all that has still to be undergone by Christ for the sake of his body, the Church” (Col 1:24

Pope Francis speaks of the Church mainly as mother, as a tender mother, and – he adds – and so must also be the followers of Christ, the Merciful One, who is “the face of the Father’s mercy” (Pope Francis, Misericordiae Vultus, 1).

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