The time of Lent is
commemorating the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It speaks of the tremendous love of God for
humanity. Lent is a call to repentance,
fasting, and alms giving; It is the constant call of God to each of us to
journey with Him, in Him, and through Him.
The aging process brings new
dimension to things, and with the devaluation of life around us in a culture of
death. I, now, meditate on the Holy
Week through the eyes of a mortal man, Benedict XVI. To die with Jesus.
“I will simply be a pilgrim who is beginning the last part of his pilgrimage on earth.” (Benedict XVI, March 28, 2013)
Good-byes are always
difficult. It cuts through our hearts –
the HOLDING ON and the LETTING GO of good-byes. That is good-bye in whatever form,
whether physical death, geographical separation, or end of a relationship. The
significant other is responding to a call.
For someone like Pope Benedict XVI, it is definitely, a response to
God’s call.
“The Lord is calling me to ‘climb the mountain’, to devote myself even more to prayer and meditation.” (Benedict XVI, March 24, 2012, Final Angelus)
And in all of Benedict XVI’s
writings, everything in life is about an encounter with Jesus – with God.
“As pilgrims, we go up to Him; As a pilgrim, He comes to us and takes
us up with Him in his ‘ascent’ to the Cross and Resurrection, to the definitive
Jerusalem that is already growing in the midst of this world in the communion
that unites us with His body.” (Benedict XVI, Jesus of Nazareth,
vol 2)
There is always that point
of intimate contact with God, so much like Michelangelo’s painting of the
creation. A reaching out of hands to
the point of touching. Not just God’s but also our hands.
But then, there is always
that inescapable CROSS that we have to face.
Abandonment, betrayal, failed aspirations, physical sickness… that we
would rather drown in the accumulation of things, whirlwind of activities, fame
and fortune.
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