Now
that we are in the middle of Lent, it's good that we consider once again the value
of suffering. All of us are harassed by it, in one form or another-it's a universal
phenomenon-and yet many still do not know how to react to it or to handle it. Suffering
has to be viewed from the perspective of faith. It should be taken out from an
overly human outlook that restricts it to its purely negative, painful and destructive
character. There's a lot more to our suffering than what our senses and our reasoning
unaided by faith can cope and discover. First,
we have to understand that our suffering was not meant for us in the beginning
of our existence. Nor is it meant for our end. It came about as consequence of
our mishandling our freedom, that supreme gift God our Father and Creator endowed
us with at our first creation in Adam and Eve. We
have to make that qualification of "first creation," because our creation
is actually an ongoing affair that is played out in stages all throughout time.
There's
the first creation by God the Father of Adam and Eve, endowing us with the best
of gifts like our freedom, then our second creation in Jesus to introduce the
crucial correcting element of the cross in our life once we misuse our freedom,
and the third stage which is our personal sanctification through the work of the
Holy Spirit. The
business of creation takes the whole of time and, in fact, covers the entirety
of our existence, since it involves our very existence itself. For as long as
we exist, our creation continues to take place. From
the point of view of God who lives in eternity, this whole process is just but
a blink to him. "One day with the Lord is as a thousand years, and a thousand
years as one day." (2 Pt 3,8) Of course, from our point of view, all this
process covers the whole of time. Back
to our freedom, we have to understand that it's that gift that makes us image
and likeness of God. Together with our intelligence, it enables us to mirror God's
greatness is us. With God's grace, it lets us enter God's life itself, sharing
that divine life and perfecting our ultimate identity. We
are not mere creatures like the others that come from God and belong to him, but
do not participate in the very intimate life of God. We are the masterpiece of
his creation, charged to be stewards of the whole of creation. But
all the goodness that our freedom gives us turned sour when we abused it. As a
consequence, the good things are now replaced with bad things that make us suffer.
This is the origin of our suffering that continues to grow, morph and spread in
ways we cannot account anymore. Still,
God has not abandoned us, and instead has undertaken a very complicated plan to
recover us, sending his Son to become man and effect our own redemption through
the Cross. With
the Cross, he has made the very cause of our downfall also as the very means of
our salvation. The Cross is where sin is transformed to grace, death to life,
darkness to light. And
thus, now with the help of the Holy Spirit, we have to understand the true value
of our cross-all the sufferings we have to endure in this life. Let's not waste
too much time figuring out why we suffer and how we can overcome it. These we
will always do somehow, but we should not stop there. Every
suffering we have should be an invitation for us to go back to Christ, to be converted
again, that is, to identify ourselves with him through the work of the Holy Spirit,
so we can effect in our mortal flesh that very transformation that took place
in Christ, who died and rose from the dead. This
is the challenge we have-how to go beyond mere human considerations of our suffering
so as to savor its ultimate religious value. We need to develop the skill to escape
from the self-focusing dynamics of suffering when considered only humanly, to
be able to hitch ourselves with the saving dynamics of Christ's suffering. Are
we just contented with complaining and groaning and moaning when we suffer? Or
do we start as soon as we can to enter into the more glorious dimensions that
our suffering offers? ********
Fr. Roy Cimagala
is the Chaplain of Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE) in Talamban,
Cebu City. You can email him at:Email: roycimagala@boholchronicle.com |