Thursday, April 14, 2011

JESUS: SUFFERING SERVANT IN THE WOMB

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No. 464 / Wednesday, April 13, 2011

JESUS: SUFFERING SERVANT IN THE WOMB

jesus-crucified-in-the-womb.jpg
I recognize that not everyone will like this picture and I myself used it with some hesitancy. But it highlights a theme that quite a few saints and spiritual authors have written about which actually seems very relevant in our time (because of abortion), namely that Christ's time in the womb was a time of suffering for our sins. Here are four quotes for our Lenten meditation:

    Salvation to all that will is nigh;
    That All, which always is all everywhere,
    Which cannot sin, and yet all sins must bear,
    Which cannot die, yet cannot choose but die,
    Lo, faithful virgin, yields Himself to lie
    In prison, in thy womb... John Donne, The Annunciation


    "The third characteristic then of the obedience of Christ is that it was tried by suffering and humiliations. To accomplish the Will of His heavenly Father, the Infant Christ, with the full use of every faculty, consented to be enclosed for nine months in the dark prison of His Mother's womb. Other infants feel not this privation as they have not the use of reason, but Christ had the use of reason and must have dreaded the confinement in the narrow womb, even of her whom He had chosen to be His Mother.

    Through obedience to His Father, and from the love He bore to man, He overcame this dread, and the Church says: 'When Thou didst take upon Thee to deliver Man, Thou didst not abhor the Virgin's womb.' Again, our dear Lord needed no small amount of patience and humility, to assume the manners and the weaknesses of a child, when He was not only wiser than Solomon, but was the Man 'in Whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.' " St. Robert Bellarmine, The Seven Words on the Cross


    "Consider the painful life that Jesus Christ led in the womb of his Mother, and the long confined and dark imprisonment that he suffered there for nine months. Other infants are indeed in the same state; but they do not feel the miseries of it, because they do not know them. But Jesus knew them well, because from the first moment of his life he had the perfect use of reason....The womb of Mary was therefore, to our Redeemer a voluntary prison, because it was a prison of love. But it was also not an unjust prison: he was indeed innocent himself, but he had offered himself to pay our debts and to satisfy for our crimes. It was therefore only reasonable for the divine justice to keep him thus imprisoned, and so begin to exact from him the due satisfaction.

    Behold the state to which the Son of God reduces himself for the love of men, he deprives himself of his liberty and puts himself in chains, to deliver us from the chains of hell." St. Alphonsus de Liguori,The Incarnation, Birth and Infancy of Jesus Christ


    "He was filled with compassion for all the miseries of creation, and this never left Him henceforward; and most of all did He feel for sin, the greatest and the truest of our miseries, and He distinctly and separately pitied the sins of each one of us in particular.

    ...He surrendered Himself as a prisoner in His Mother s womb, for crime, for debt, and as a prisoner of war, as if He were a delinquent threefold by all those three liabilities. He only left His prison to suffer and to expiate, and it seems as though He loved it so, that He repeats His state of imprisonment in the Blessed Sacrament." Father Faber, The Blessed Sacrament


When I think of Christ suffering in the womb for our sins it gives me great hope. Hope that He has obtained for us a special grace during His time of suffering in the womb - a grace that will enable us to overcome abortion in our time.


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