April 26, 2023
by
DignityUSA
<p><em>How do we acknowledge the redemptive potential of suffering with glorifying it? Todays reflection grapples with this question and invites us not so much to an answer as to a process. Perhaps it is not the suffering that is redemptive but rather loving through suffering that saves us.</em></p><div class=oldwebkit> </div><div class=oldwebkit><p><strong>April 30 2023: Fourth Sunday of Easter Year A</strong></p><p>Acts 2:14a 36-41</p><p>Psalm 23: 1-3a 3b-4 5 6</p><p>1 Peter 2:20b-25</p><p>John 10:1-10</p><p> </p><h3>Healed by Jesus Wounds? The Power of Loving Through Our Suffering</h3><p><em>A reflection by John Falcone</em></p><p>This weeks first reading tells us that Peter used many arguments to persuade the crowd in Jerusalem so that they might accept Jesus message (Acts 2:40). Its clear from our gospel reading that this message centers on Jesus who proclaims I am the sheep gate. The thief comes only to slaughter steal and destroy. I came that you might have life to the full.</p><p>But for me the second reading troubles these waters with one of the most puzzling lines in Christian Scripture: By Christs wounds you are healed. (1 Peter 2:24) Glorifying suffering can be very dangerous. As feminist womanist and queer theologians have underlined suffering (exploitation violence early death) is not something that we should aspire to. Its a real brokenness that burdens our world. How can one persons suffering bring other people salvation? How does following in Jesus wounded footsteps bring us to the fullness of life?</p><p>The author of 1 Peter is reflecting on Jesus life death and resurrection by quoting the fourth Suffering Servant song from Isaiah (52:1353:12). But you were pierced for our offenses crushed for our sins; upon you lies a chastening which brings us wholeness and through your wounds we are healed. (53:5) The earliest Christians recognized the addressee of this poem immediately: Isaiahs prophecy must be about Jesus whose love courage and non-resistance to crucifixion was so remarkable that it rocked their whole world.</p><p>In a way I find the passage from 1 Peter deeply moving. Heres a paraphrase of it that I fell in love with; the rendition is by John Michael Talbot a Catholic musician in the Franciscan tradition. (Ive adapted the language to be more inclusive; you can find the song entitled Peters Canticle <a href=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGbb1ry1Hoo target=_blank>here</a>.)</p><p></p><blockquote><p><em>Jesus has suffered for you</em></p><p><em>to comfort your life in Christs very dying </em></p><p><em>dying so that we all might live</em></p><p><em>bearing all our wounds</em></p><p><em>so that we might be healed.</em></p><p><em>Let all who seek the true path of peace</em></p><p><em>simply come to follow in the footsteps of this person:</em></p><p><em>who laid down their life</em></p><p><em>when threatened with hatred.</em></p><p><em>Thus Jesus came to live in the blessings of love.</em></p><p><em>Thus Jesus came to live forever.</em></p></blockquote><p></p><p>There is a kind of mystical logic in these lyrics: Jesus embraces each of us in all our woundedness and in all Christs woundedness. Jesus embrace is so deep that it blesses us with a new vision and a new power to live. That new life is so full of love that no suffering can ever overcome it.</p><p>Jesus was constantly resisting the powers of brokenness the forces of exploitation and early death in first-century Palestine. Jesus casts out demons (including a demon called Roman Legion). Jesus overturns bankers tables in the first-century Jewish Federal Reserve. Jesus blesses the poor the hungry and the weeping; but calls woe on the rich satisfied and indifferent. (Mark 5:1-20; 11:15-18; Luke 6:20-26) But when a government backed lynch-crew arrived Jesus lifted not a finger in self-defense.</p><p>Is there anything you can do when faced with a lynch-mob? Hatred and fear overwhelm people all the time on our planet; and Jesus was no different than anyone else. </p><p>But theres something about how Jesus faced that inevitable ending. Jesus kept on loving even as the mob swept him up in their hysteria. Jesus connected with family friends and fellow sufferers even while dying. Jesus cried out with emotion anguish and grief. Perhaps this is what allows Jesus wounds to be healing.</p><p>Jesus did not try to skip over the suffering or try to ignore it or try to push through as if failure were impossible. Jesus faced it. Evil was victorious on Calvary but God was victorious in the end.</p><p>We also have plenty of wounds; we also experience plenty of failures. Some of them are personal (broken relationships failed projects failed dreams). Some of them are social and political (war in so many places gun violence almost every day). Some of them are ecological and cataclysmic (rampant resource depletion climate disaster).</p><p>For us following in the footsteps of Jesus certainly means doing everything in our scope and our power to resist and correct what is broken in our relationships in our Dignity communities in our political and economic ways of life.</p><p>But I think that following in the footsteps of Jesus also means letting the failures really hit us. Facing the suffering. Crying. Cursing the universe. Breaking down in the arms of our friends. Feeling the full impact of inevitable failures and continuing to love as the waves drag us down.</p><p>If we let the failures hit us and keep on loving perhaps we too can experience the fullness of life.</p></div><div class=oldwebkit> </div><div class=mobile-full><img class=mobile-full src=https://www.dignityusa.org/sites/default/files/civicrm/persist/contribute/images/uploads/static/falcone_a2a312293220b0c7741b5a939de244a9.png alt= width=166 vspace=0 hspace=0></div><p><em><strong>John P. Falcone</strong> is a practical theologian religious educator and a practitioner of Theatre of the Oppressed (PhD Boston College). He has been a Dignity member for more than 20 years with close links to Dignity NY where he met his husband Matias Wibowo in 2005. He is currently Theologian-in-Residence at St. Matthews Bethnal Green (Church of England) in Londons East End.</em></p><p style=text-align: center;><a class=btn btn-primary href=https://www.dignityusa.org/civicrm/mailing/subscribe>Subscribe to Breath of the Spirit</a></p>
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