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Emphasis from the Gospel of John
"He showed them his hands and his side."
Salesian Perspective
In the wake of Jesus' crucifixion
and death, the apostles were locked away together in fear. They were afraid
that they might suffer the same fate as their teacher.
Despite their anxious seclusion,
Jesus breaks into their lives: not merely into the physical space in which they
were taking refuge; Jesus also breaks into the core of their minds and hearts.
Jesus attempts to calm their fears; he challenges them to be at peace; he does
this in a rather confrontational and mysterious manner: by showing them the
wounds in his hands and side."
The experience of resurrection
did not remove the scars of Jesus' woundedness, the lasting marks of pain, disappointment,
misunderstanding, rejection, humiliation, abandonment, suffering and death.
Notwithstanding these wounds, however, Christ's resurrection powerfully demonstrated
that pain, sadness, suffering and injustice did not, ultimately, enjoy the last
word. While suffering is clearly a part of life, there is much more to life
than suffering.
St. Francis de Sales wrote: "We
must often recall that our Lord has saved us by his suffering and endurance,
and that we must work out our salvation by sufferings and afflictions, enduring
with all possible forbearance the injuries, denials and discomforts we meet."
(Introduction to the Devout Life, Part III, Chapter 3)
All of us bear the wounds of failure,
deception, betrayal, disappointment and loss. Our hearts, our minds, our memories
- our souls - bear the scars to prove it. Like the apostles, we, too, are tempted
to withdraw from others, to lock ourselves away in some secluded emotional or
spiritual corner of the world, living in fear of what other pain or disappointments
may come our way. Of course, in withdrawing from life, we figuratively - in
some cases, even literally - die.
Jesus clearly demonstrates in
his own life that our wounds do not necessarily need to overwhelm or disable
us. While these wounds may be permanent, they need not rob us of the power and
promise of recovery, of renewal - of resurrection - unless we despair, unless
we allow ourselves to be defeated by the nails of negativity.
The wounds of our past continue
to leave their mark in our present: they don't necessarily determine the course
of our future. Turn to the love of Jesus who knows what it means to be wounded
and who shows us how to move through and beyond them. St. Francis de Sales wrote:
"Look often on Christ, crucified, naked, blasphemed, slandered, forsaken, and
overwhelmed by every kind of weariness, sadness, sorrow and labor." Jesus triumphed
over the wounds of his humanity: so, too, with God's help, can we.
Rev. Michael S. Murray, OSFS,
is Executive Director of the De Sales Spirituality Center
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