Suffering Can Be A Path to Inner
Freedom
VATICAN
CITY, JUN 2, 2004 (VIS) - Psalm 40, "The prayer of a sick man," was the
theme of the Pope's catechesis today at the weekly general audience,
held in St. Peter's Square in the presence of 13,000 faithful.
John
Paul II stated that Jesus quotes this Psalm on Holy Thursday in the
Cenacle to show his deep sadness at the moment of betrayal by Judas: "He
who breaks bread with me has raised his heel against me." These words,
he said, express "the supplication of a man who is sick and abandoned by
his friends."
"A sick
man starts his talk asking pardon of God, according to the traditional
Old Testament concept that for every pain there was a corresponding
fault. ... Even if this is a vision overcome by Christ, the final
Revealer, suffering in itself can conceal a secret value and become a
path to purification, to inner freedom, to enrichment of the soul. It
invites us to overcome superficiality, vanity, egoism and sin, and to
trust God and His saving will more intensely."
The
Holy Father remarked that "when evil-doers enter the scene, coming to a
sick person not to comfort them but rather to attack them," the sick man
who prays feels indifference and hardness, even on the part of his
friends who are transformed into hostile and hateful figures."
"The
sense of bitterness is deep when the one who strikes us is 'a friend'
whom we trusted, called literally in Hebrew 'a man of peace'. ... In our
prayer echoes the voice of a crowd of persons who are forgotten and
humiliated in their infirmity and weakness, also by those who should
have supported them."
In
conclusion, the Pope said that "the prayer of Psalm 40 does not end,
however, on this dark background. The one who prays is certain that God
will appear on his horizon, revealing, once again, His love. He will
give His support and take the sick person in His arms. ... The Psalm,
marked by pain, ends on a note of light and hope."
(Source:
EWTN.com)
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