I Will Heal Their Wounds
Of his own free will Jesus ran to meet
those sufferings that were foretold in the Scriptures concerning him. He had
forewarned his disciples about them several times; he had rebuked Peter for
being reluctant to accept the announcement of his passion, and he had made it
clear that it was by means of his suffering that the world’s salvation was to
be accomplished. This was why he stepped forward and presented himself to those
who came in search of him, saying: I am the one you are looking for. For the
same reason he made no reply when he was accused, and refused to hide when he
could have done so; although in the past he had slipped away on more than one
occasion when they had tried to apprehend him.
Jesus also wept over Jerusalem because by
her unwillingness to believe she was bent on her own ruin, and upon the temple,
once so renowned, he passed sentence of utter destruction. Patiently he put up
with being struck in the face by a man who was doubly a slave, in body and in
spirit. He allowed himself to be slapped, spat upon, insulted, tortured,
scourged and finally crucified. He accepted two robbers as his companions in
punishment, on his right and on his left. He endured being reckoned with
murderers and criminals. He drank the vinegar and the bitter gall yielded by
the unfaithful vineyard of Israel. He submitted to crowning with thorns instead
of with vine twigs and grapes; he was ridiculed with the purple cloak, holes
were dug in his hands and his feet, and at last he was carried to the grave.
All this he endured in working out our
salvation. For since those who were enslaved to sin were liable to the
penalties of sin, he himself, exempt from sin though he was and walking in the
path of perfect righteousness, underwent the punishment of sinners. By his cross
he blotted out the decree of the ancient curse: for, as Paul says: Christ
redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us; for it is
written: “Cursed be everyone who hangs on a tree.” And by his crown of thorns
he put an end to that punishment meted out to Adam, who after his sin had heard
the sentence: Cursed is the ground because of you; thorns and thistles shall it
bring forth for you.
In tasting the gall Jesus took on himself
the bitterness and toil of man’s mortal, painful life. By drinking the vinegar
he made his own the degradation men had suffered, and in the same act gave us
the grace to better our condition. By the purple robe he signified his
kingship, by the reed he hinted at the weakness and rottenness of the devil’s
power. By taking the slap in the face, and thus suffering the violence,
corrections and blows that were due to us, he proclaimed our freedom.
His side was pierced as Adam’s was; yet
there came forth not a woman who, being beguiled, was to be the death-bearer, but
a fountain of life that regenerates the world by its two streams: the one to
renew us in the baptismal font and clothe us with the garment of immortality,
the other to feed us, the reborn, at the table of God, just as babes are
nourished with milk.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a treatise on the Incarnation
of the Lord by Theodoret of Cyr, bishop
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