3/6/2004
‘PASSION’ AND ATONEMENT
As one might guess, Andrew Greeley has seen The Passion of the Christ and found a serious flaw:
We all must suffer; we all must die. Death, no matter how brief or how protracted, is horrible. Do those who die after a prolonged battle with cancer die any less horribly than Jesus? What does his death say to all of us who must die? One will watch ‘’The Passion of the Christ'’ in vain for any hint of an answer to that question.
The lesson of Good Friday, properly understood, is that God suffers with us. Like every good parent, he suffers when his children suffer. When Jesus hung on the cross, God (the person was the Second Person of the Trinity) made common cause with the Iraqi peasant shot in the back and tossed into the pit to be consumed by fire. God cannot prevent our sufferings, but he suffers with us.
Isn’t God above all suffering? One can only reply that the God of the Hebrew Scriptures presents himself as suffering with his people. Good Friday is good precisely because on that day God identified himself with his people. ‘’Christ,'’ as Annie Dillard writes, ‘’hangs on the cross, as it were, forever, always incarnate and always nailed.'’
That fundamental flaw that St. Paul describes as the struggle between what we want to do and what we actually do (and which St. Augustine dubbed ‘’original sin'’) is our fear of our own mortality. We do those things that we know we shouldn’t do because we are afraid of death. On Good Friday, God did not take away death, but he did absorb our God-forsakenness and promise that when it is time to die, he will die once again with us.
Amen to that.
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‘’Christ,'’ as Annie Dillard writes, ‘’hangs on the cross, as it were, forever, always incarnate and always nailed.'’
Putting to rest the later parts of the New Testament where Christ is pictured seated at the right hand of god always making intercession for us. Or that his death put an end to the continuing sacrifical system. Or the empty tomb.
One suspects that sort of attitude is part of the reason reformers removed the christ from the crucifix when they made their crosses. He *wasn’t* on the cross forever.
Comment by bryan — 3/6/2004 @ 1:12 pm