Today the
Church remembers the Last Supper of the Lord, and she prepares to embark with
Him on the road to Calvary. As Saint John Paul II wrote in his 1991 Message for Lent, it is today that we should become more aware of the
intense suffering that Christ experienced:
As Lent draws to its culmination on Holy Thursday, the
Liturgy recalls the institution of the Eucharist, the memorial of Christ’s Passion,
Death and Resurrection. This Sacrament, in which the Church celebrates the
depth of her faith, should lead us to become ever more profoundly aware of the
poverty, suffering and persecution which Christ endured.
Not only
should we allow this awareness to develop into deep gratitude, but we should
also allow it to draw us into deep solidarity with the suffering poor, for the “Son of God, who became poor
out of love for us, became one with those who suffer.”
As we
find our converted selves completely dependent upon God and His will for us, John Paul II
challenges us to see the completely dependent Christ in the poor:
As we look at Jesus Christ,
the Good Samaritan, we cannot forget that from the poverty of the manger to the
total abandonment of the Cross, he chose to become one with the “least.” Christ
teaches us detachment from riches, trust in God and readiness to share. He
urges us to look at our brothers and sisters who are poor and suffering from
the point of view of one who – in poverty – knows what it is to be totally
dependent upon God and to stand in absolute need of him.
Perhaps
an encounter with the poor today will help us all to enter more deeply into the
mystery of Christ’s Passion, Death and Resurrection. John Paul II was able to
do this during his last Lent on earth, for he found himself poor and suffering on death’s doorstep. He died ten years ago today, in fact,
and so we ask him to pray for us all, that we may relieve Christ’s suffering in
the poor.
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