A
Poem on the Passion of the Lord
Whoever you are who approach, and are entering the
precincts of the middle of the temple, stop a little and look upon me, who,
though innocent, suffered for your crime; lay me up in your mind, keep me in
your breast. I am He who, pitying the bitter misfortunes of men, came hither as
a messenger of offered peace, and as a full atonement for the fault of men.
Here the brightest light from above is restored to the earth; here is the
merciful image of safety; here I am a rest to you, the right way, the true redemption,
the banner of God, and a memorable sign of fate. It was on account of you and
your life that I entered the Virgin's womb, was made man, and suffered a
dreadful death; nor did I find rest anywhere in the regions of the earth, but
everywhere threats, everywhere labours. First of all a wretched dwelling in the
land of Judæa was a shelter for me at my birth, and for my mother with me: here
first, amidst the outstretched sluggish cattle, dry grass gave me a bed in a
narrow stall. I passed my earliest years in the Pharian regions, being an exile
in the reign of Herod; and after my return to Judæa I spent the rest of my
years, always engaged in fastings, and the extremity of poverty itself, and the
lowest circumstances; always by healthful admonitions applying the minds of men
to the pursuit of genial uprightness, uniting with wholesome teaching many
evident miracles: on which account impious Jerusalem, harassed by the raging
cares of envy and cruel hatred, and blinded by madness, dared to seek for me,
though innocent, by deadly punishment, a cruel death on the dreadful cross. And
if you yourself wish to discriminate these things more fully, and if it
delights you to go through all my groans, and to experience griefs with me, put
together the designs and plots, and the impious price of my innocent blood, and
the pretended kisses of a disciple, and the insults and strivings of the cruel
multitude; and, moreover, the blows, and tongues prepared for accusations.
Picture to your mind both the witnesses, and the accursed judgment of the
blinded Pilate, and the immense cross pressing my shoulders and wearied back,
and my painful steps to a dreadful death. Now survey me from head to foot,
deserted as I am, and lifted up afar from my beloved mother. Behold and see my locks
clotted with blood, and my blood-stained neck under my very hair, and my head
drained with cruel thorns, and pouring down like rain from all sides a stream
of blood over my divine face. Survey my compressed and sightless eyes, and my
afflicted cheeks; see my parched tongue poisoned with gall, and my countenance
pale with death. Behold my hands pierced with nails, and my arms drawn out, and
the great wound in my side; see the blood streaming from it, and my perforated
feet, and blood-stained limbs. Bend your knee, and with lamentation adore the
venerable wood of the cross, and with lowly countenance stooping to the earth,
which is wet with innocent blood, sprinkle it with rising tears, and at times
bear me and my admonitions in your devoted heart. Follow the footsteps of my
life, and while you look upon my torments and cruel death, remembering my
innumerable pangs of body and soul, learn to endure hardships, and to watch
over your own safety. These memorials, if at any time you find pleasure in
thinking over them, if in your mind there is any confidence to bear anything
like my sufferings), if the piety due, and gratitude worthy of my labours shall
arise, will be incitements to true virtue, and they will be shields against the
snares of an enemy, aroused by which you will be safe, and as a conqueror bear
off the palm in every contest. If these memorials shall turn away your senses,
which are devoted to a perishable world, from the fleeting shadow of earthly
beauty, the result will be, that you will not venture, enticed by empty hope,
to trust the frail enjoyments of fickle fortune, and to place your hope in the
fleeting years of life. But, truly, if you thus regard this perishable world,
and through your love of a better country deprive yourself of earthly riches
and the enjoyment of present things, the prayers of the pious will bring you up
in sacred habits, and in the hope of a happy life, amidst severe punishments,
will cherish you with heavenly dew, and feed you with the sweetness of the
promised good. Until the great favour of God shall recall your happy soul to
the heavenly regions, your body being left after the fates of death. Then freed
from all labour, then joyfully beholding the angelic choirs, and the blessed
companies of saints in perpetual bliss, it shall reign with me in the happy
abode of perpetual peace.
Author unknown; formerly ascribed to Lactantius
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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