Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.April 10, 2009

The Passion can seem so far away. 

Despite the fact that many of us will listen very carefully to the story of the Passion today, the events that happened in 1st-century Palestine can seem unimaginably distant.  When I was growing up in suburban Philadelphia, it seemed not participatory but in fact slightly risible when the parishioners at my hometown church would say, “Crucify him!”  Or rather, the unexclamated, “Crucify him...”  For one thing, no one there felt like crucifying Jesus.  For another, we were sitting in a comfortable climate-controlled church listening to a sedate retelling of the Passion, not baying for someone’s blood in a hot dusty square in Jerusalem.  We believed that Jesus suffered, died and rose from the dead, but that was a long time ago.

Yet every day we are called to reenact that Passion--by dying to self.  We are called to let go of, to relinquish, to let die, anything that keep us from greater freedom to follow Jesus.  And by dying to our self we, paradoxically, experience new life. 

So on this Good Friday it is important to ask ourselves: “What is keeping you from more closely following Jesus?”  What needs to die so that God can give you new life?  For me it’s the need to be liked and admired by all.  That has to die, so that I might be more able to follow Christ.  I’ve been praying for God’s help lately, in letting that part of me die.

That’s why this “Christ in Gethsemane” painting by Heinrich Hofmann has always been a favorite.  Mocked (and I use that word intentionally) by art critics as kitschy or banal, it shows Jesus at the moment when he gives up everything to God the Father—especially all his hopes for his life’s great project, which seems to be at an end.  Into his hands he commends his spirit.  And I believe—though I may be wrong—that while Jesus freely accepted the future that God had in store, he may not have known exactly what kind of new life God would give him.

At Gethsemane, Jesus’s experiences directly intersect with our own “dyings to self.”  For neither do we know, when we die to self, exactly what God will do.  But we hope.   As Jesus did.

James Martin, SJ

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
15 years ago
If a person is having a dying-to-self conversation then their lives are blessed (or cursed) with comfort. Many do not have to simulate the psychic crushing that you describe - as they have been cursed or graced with adverse cirumstances in the form of disease, loss or mastery by sin. God, by nature, had no experience of this state of suffering, which is why we have Good Friday and the sacrifice of the Cross. It allowed God to take the form of a man and experience the psychic crushing that is all too common to the human condition. In other words, for many following Jesus is not the issue, but recognizing that he followed us. That is the true gift of Good Friday.

The latest from america

Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman,” which turns 75 this year, was a huge hit by any commercial or critical standard. In 1949, it pulled off an unprecedented trifecta, winning the New York Drama Circle Critics’ Award, the Tony Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. So attention must be paid!
James T. KeaneApril 23, 2024
In Part II of his exclusive interview with Gerard O’Connell, the rector of the soon-to-be integrated Gregorian University describes his mission to educate seminarians who are ‘open to growth.’
Gerard O’ConnellApril 23, 2024
Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, center, holds his crozier during Mass at the Our Lady of Peace chapel in the Notre Dame of Jerusalem Center on April 13, 2024. (OSV News photo/Sinan Abu Mayzer, Reuters)
My recent visit to the Holy Land revealed fear and depression but also the grit and resilience of a people to whom the prophets preached and for whom Jesus wept.
Timothy Michael DolanApril 23, 2024
The Gregorian’s American-born rector, Mark Lewis, S.J., describes how three Jesuit academic institutes in Rome will be integrated to better serve a changing church.
Gerard O’ConnellApril 22, 2024