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(Palm
Sunday today starts the Holy Week season. As the Passion is
re-read, many will again identify with the bystander who was
reluctantly "shanghaied" into greatness. Like many
of us, Simon of Cyrene "was merely at the wrong place
at the wrong time" writes Oblate priest Fr. Ron Rolheiser
in his article "Helping Simon of Cyrene" See below.
- JLM )
"It
seems as though through purely earthly accidents we are made
responsible for what is heavenly and divine."
"(The
Jesuit scholar) Karl Rahner wrote those words to describe
what happened to Saint Joseph when he was asked by an angel
to be the husband to Mary. (He was to) support her in the
birth and raising of Jesus: "Take the child to yourself."
'Something
of God was entrusted into Joseph's care. Not because he wanted
it or planned it. He himself was (not) central to the event.
He was asked to do something simply because of circumstance:
he was engaged to someone inside a great drama.
Moreover,
what he was asked to do radically reshaped his life, in a
way not according to his own choosing."
"Rahner's
words are just as accurate when applied to the man conscripted
to help Jesus carry his cross: Simon of Cyrene.
"The
Passion accounts tell us that, when Jesus was too weak and
wearied to carry the cross, a passer-by, Simon of Cyrene was
forced to help him carry it. We aren't given any details as
to how this happened other than that Simon was someone who
was incidentally there. (He was) a "passer-by,"
a victim of circumstance. This was not something for which
he had planned or volunteered. He was merely at the wrong
place at the wrong time.
"No
doubt too, being conscripted to help carry the cross was an
irritation. It was also guilt by association with a condemned
criminal, and therefore something humbling and shameful for
him. Helping a scorned person carry his or her humiliation,
in front of a jeering crowd, doesn't exactly bring the same
reaction as helping Tiger Woods carry his golf clubs.
"Whatever
Simon's feelings, there can be no doubt that helping Jesus
carry his cross was something that was unwanted and unpleasant.
It was experienced, at the time, as an unfairness, bad luck.'
"Yet,
ironically, this would be the most significant thing he would
do in his whole life.
(It)
earned him a place in history and folklore that can only be
envied by the most famous of athletes, entertainers, politicians,
writers, and religious figures.
"Simon
of Cyrene will forever be famous. Thousands of years from
now his name will still be remembered -- and for the right
reason: he helped carry the cross of Jesus.
"There's
a wonderful mystical image here, namely: the picture of a
man or woman being victimized by circumstance so that he or
she -- simply by being at a given place at a given time --
is conscripted to do a task that is unwanted, unplanned for,
humbling. (It will) disrupt his or her own agenda and dreams.
And yet this unwanted thing becomes, in the end, the most
important thing he or she will ever do.
"How
does that happen to you? How do you become a Simon of Cyrene,
helping Jesus carry his cross?
"The
cross of Jesus appears in many forms. You are Simon of Cyrene,
helping Jesus carry the cross: Whenever you are the one who
has to take care of an aging parent because circumstance arranges
that you are the one who happens to be living close by; whenever
you are the parent of a handicapped child and are asked to
do things ordinary parents aren't asked to do;
"Whenever
you are the one to whom the emotionally needy person, at work,
chooses to reach out; whenever you are the one whose gentle
nature makes it difficult to say no and people take advantage
of you; whenever you are the one who is the first at the scene
of an accident; whenever you are the one whom the drunk accosts
on the side-walk;
"Whenever
you are the one who forever finds herself caught up in duties,
not of your own choosing, that always have you around when
the less-glamorous work needs to be done; whenever you are
the one whose plans and dreams can be sacrificed because everyone
else's are deemed more important; whenever you're the one
whose life is disrupted by unwanted circumstance. Then, you
are Simon of Cyrene, helping Jesus carry the cross.
"Simon
of Cyrene was not central to the drama or meaning of Jesus'
passion and death. He was an unimportant figure who happened
to be standing at the edges of things when the drama accidentally
enfolded him and forced him to play an un-glamorous, self-effacing,
but needed, role. His own agenda and plans had to be sacrificed
and his response was, no doubt, less than fully enthusiastic.
"Yet
this unplanned for, conscripted, humble service became the
most important thing he ever did, his signature piece. And
(it ) gave him a place in history beyond the thousands and
millions whose place in the drama of life was deemed important.
"There's
a lesson here. 'I used to get upset about all the interruptions
to my work until one day I realized that the interruptions
were my real work, Henri Nouwen once wrote
"Pure earthly accidents often do make us responsible
for what is divine'. And they conscript us to our real work."
(E-mail:
juan_mercado@boholchronicle.com)
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