Suy Niệm thứ Sáu Tuần Thánh, Cuộc Khổ Nạn của Chúa
Kitô
Hôm nay, chúng ta tưởng niệm cuộc Khổ Nạn của Chúa Giêsu Kitô. Cuộc hành trình Thương khó của Ngài, bắt đầu tại nhà Tiệc Ly với Bí Tích Thánh Thể, Vườn Cây Dầu, các cung điện của Cai Pha thầy cả thượng tế, và vua Hêrôđê, Dinh thự của quan tổng trấn Philatô, đồi Calvary (núi sọ) nơi Chúa đã chết và ngôi mộ bỏ hoang. Ở trong mỗi một nơi và ở trong những địa điểm này, tất cả chúng ta, mỗi người chúng ta đã làm cho Chúa Giêsu Kitô đã phải chịu đau khổ cách này hay cách khác và Ngài đã phải chết đẻ cứu chuộc chúng ta.
Thiên Chúa có thể có
thể cứu chuộc chúng ta bằng hàng ngàn cách khác nhau, Nhưng Chúa Giêsu đã chọn con đường hèn hạ nhục nhã nhất, đau khổ nhất chỉ vì yêu thương chúng ta quá đỗi. Vì quá yêu thương chúng
ta mà Ngài đã từ bỏ chính
cuộc sống của chính mình, để đem sự sống đến cho mỗi người chúng ta. Đó là chương trình cứu độ của thiên Chúa, chương trình của tình yêu vĩ đại nhất mà
Ngài đã dành cho con người tội lỗi chúng ta. Nhất định đây không phải
là sự ngẫu hứng: nhưng
chính đó là điều đã được tiên báo trước trong Cựu Ước, như Chúa Giêsu đã nhắc đến những việc đó sẽ xảy ra trong nhiều lần.
Trong Bữa Tiệc Ly, Ngài đã
ban cho chúng ta của ăn, thức uống để nuôi dưỡng linh hồn chúng ta được sống đời
đời; đó chính là thân mình, thịt và máu của Ngài đã hy sinh. Tại vườn cây Dầu (Ghếtsêmanê)
Chúa Giêsu cầu
nguyện và xin
được "Vâng" theo
ý của Thiên Chúa
là Cha. Trên thập giá, Ngài
rất tỉnh táo Ngàivà đã thưa VÂNG một lần nữa với Chúa Cha, Ngài dâng hiến tất cả linh hồn và thân xác của Ngài
trong sự thanh
thản và
tự do.
Lạy Chúa Giêsu, Đấng Cứu Thế của chúng con, với hai bàn tay của chúng con , chúng con sẽ bảo vệ Chúa với đôi bàn tay của Chúa đã ban ho chúng con, Chúng con sẽ vinh danh Chúa trong vinh quang với trí thông minh của chúng con, và chúng con sẽ ngưỡng mộ Chúa bằng với tất cả trái tim của chúng con. Chúng con sẽ làm những điều đó với Mẹ. Lạy Mẹ Maria mẹ của chúng con xin cầu cho chúng con.
The Passion of Christ
Today, breathe taken, we commemorate the Passion of Jesus Christ. His itinerary; the Cenacle of the Eucharist, the Garden of Olives, the palaces of Caifas and Herrod, the Pretoria of Pilate, Calvary of his death and the tomb. In each one of these places, between us all, we have made him suffer.
God could have redeemed us in a thousand different ways. He chose the path of suffering to the point of giving up his life. "To give ones life" is the greatest show of Love there is. There is no improvising here: it was prophesized in the Old Testament, Jesus made reference to it many times; in the Last Supper He gave us the present as food, his "Body which will be given up"; at Gethsemane He prays and sais "yes" to God the Father. On the Cross, very consciously, says YES again, giving up his spirit with total freedom and serenity.
Jesus, my Saviour, I will look after you with my hands, I will defend you with my arms, I will give you glory with my intelligence, and I will adore you with all my heart. I will do it with your, Our, blessed Mother, Mary.
Good
Friday of the Lord’s Passion (Reflection I)
Standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary of Magdala. When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son.” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother.” And from that hour the disciple took her into his home. John 19:25–27
If God invited you to be present at one moment in the Scriptures, to see it with your eyes, hear it with your ears, and experience it with your heart, what moment would that be? Certainly, Gabriel’s announcement to Mary, Christ’s birth, a miracle, or a sermon would be awe-inspiring. The moment, however, that perhaps best manifests pure and perfect love is the love shared between Mother and Son during Jesus’ three hours on the Cross.
Throughout His life, Jesus’ mother was uniquely privileged to know Him like no other. She bore Him in her womb, nursed Him at her breast, bathed Him as a child, fed Him, watched Him grow, and was attentive to His every virtue. As His ministry attracted both great attention and harsh criticism, her Immaculate and motherly Heart remained perfectly attentive to Him and His mission.
As tensions rose during the week of Passover, her motherly intuition filled her Immaculate Heart with an intertwining of the most holy love and sorrow imaginable. When Jesus was arrested, the pain was deeper than any human heart had ever suffered, and her resolve to be present at her Son’s Passion was stronger than any earthly force could stop. No fear, threat, or sorrow could keep her from accompanying her Son to the very end. In perfect union with the will of God, Mary’s love was unwavering. Her silent presence at the Cross became a testament to the boundless strength of maternal devotion. Just as she had embraced Jesus in the joy of His Nativity, she now held Him in her heart during His Passion, standing as both witness and participant in the work of redemption.
As Jesus looked down at her from the Cross upon which He hung, the human consolation He received from His mother’s gaze was all He needed. Her love and affection were His only remaining earthly possessions. Stripped bare, nailed to the Cross, and suffocating, His mother’s love could not be taken from Him. Yet Jesus came to give all out of love—everything He possessed, including His mother. Out of love, Jesus entrusted her to John, the beloved disciple—and through him, to all of us—so that we might receive her as our own mother.
As He looked at her with the deepest love ever shared between two people, He called her “Woman”—“Woman, behold your son.” By calling her “Woman,” Jesus revealed the fulfillment of her identity in salvation history. She was the woman foretold in Genesis and the woman revealed in the vision of Revelation. In that moment, when the heavens were torn open and grace poured down upon the world, Jesus’ mother fulfilled her role as the New Eve, the new Mother of all the Living. She became the Mother and protector of all God’s children, interceding for them with unparalleled love and participating in the mediation of God’s grace. To John, who stood by her, Jesus said, “Behold, your mother.” With that, He thirsted, drank the bitter wine on a sprig of hyssop, cried out, “It is finished!,” bowed His head, and handed over His spirit.
As we celebrate this Good Friday, fix your gaze upon the moment when human love, united with divine love, was revealed to the world in the most sacred way. The love between this Mother and Son, alongside the gift of His mother and the New Eve to all of us, embodies the selfless nature of divine love. Ponder this mystery. Pray that you may be spiritually drawn into that moment. Gaze upon their love and hear the Messiah, the Son of God, say to you: “Behold, your mother.” Hearing, believing, and responding to those words makes you present at that moment when love was perfected and salvation poured forth upon the world.
Most generous Lord, as You suffered upon the Cross, having nothing left in this world but Your mother, You entrusted her to us to be our mother, so that we could participate in the love that You and she shared. I do behold her as my mother, and You as my King and God. I love You and thank You with all my heart for the unfathomable gift You have given me. Jesus, I trust in You.
The Cup of Consummation
Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion (Reflection II)
After this, aware that everything was now finished, in order that the Scripture might be fulfilled, Jesus said, “I thirst.” There was a vessel filled with common wine. So they put a sponge soaked in wine on a sprig of hyssop and put it up to his mouth. When Jesus had taken the wine, he said, “It is finished.” And bowing his head, he handed over the spirit. John 19:28–30
The Passover meal Jesus shared with His disciples on Holy Thursday was not merely a commemoration of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt. It was the fulfillment of all that the first Passover prefigured and the establishment of the New and Perpetual Passover in Christ, the Lamb of God and Eternal High Priest.
The Old Testament Passover followed strict prescriptions: The lamb had to be without blemish, symbolizing purity, and its blood was sprinkled on the altar to recall Israel’s protection from the angel of death. Families ate the lamb with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, accompanied by four cups of wine. Each cup symbolized a stage in God’s promises made in Exodus 6:6–7:
First Cup (Sanctification): “I will free you.”
Second Cup (Deliverance): “I will deliver you.”
Third Cup (Redemption): “I will redeem you.”
Fourth Cup (Praise or Consummation): “I will take you as my own.”
These promises are fulfilled in Christ’s offering, signifying our freedom from sin, deliverance from evil, redemption through His sacrifice, and consummation in His eternal Kingdom.
At the Last Supper, Jesus altered the structure of this ancient meal, instituting the Eucharist. With the third cup, the Cup of Redemption, He declared, “This is my body, which will be given for you” (Luke 22:19) and “This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which will be poured out for you” (Luke 22:20). Through these words, Christ revealed that He was the true Passover Lamb, offering His Body and Blood for the salvation of the world.
Importantly,
He left the fourth and final cup—the Cup of Consummation—undrunk, signaling
that His work of redemption was not yet complete. Jesus told His disciples, “I
shall not drink this fruit of the vine until the day when I drink it new in the
kingdom of my Father” (Matthew
26:29). The completion of the Passover
would not end in the Upper Room but on the Cross.
Three significant moments at the Cross unfold in John’s
Gospel: Jesus entrusts His mother to John, expresses His thirst, and, after
receiving wine, proclaims, “It is finished.” His thirst was a divine longing
for souls to enter the Church, the new family of God. In uniting Mary and John
beneath the Cross, Jesus symbolically entrusted all believers into this
communion of love, born from His side in the order of grace. When He drank the
wine on the Cross, the fourth cup—the Cup of Consummation—was completed, sealing
the New Covenant in His Blood.
The Cross becomes the altar of the New Passover. Jesus, the unblemished Lamb and High Priest, offers His life as the perfect sacrifice for the redemption of souls. Each time we celebrate the Eucharist, we mystically partake of this perpetual offering, receiving the true Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world. The four cups of the New Passover are fulfilled in the Sacrifice of the Mass: God frees us from sin, delivers us from evil, redeems us through His Blood, and takes us to Himself in love.
Reflect today on Christ’s words from the Cross: “It is finished.” In other words, it is consummated! See Him inviting you to be united with His Blessed Mother as her child, a member of His Body, the Church. Hear His thirst for your soul, and behold the Lamb of God as He drinks the Cup of Consummation, completing His work of redemption. May His finished work transform your life, drawing you ever deeper into His life-giving love.
Holy Lamb of God and High Priest, You offered Your life as the perfect and perpetual Sacrificial Lamb, the lamb without blemish, for the salvation of souls. Draw me into the great mystery of redemption. Open my eyes to see what You have done, and open my heart to the abundant grace poured forth upon me. You are my God, my Messiah, my Lord, and my Savior. Jesus, I trust in You.
Sacrificial Love
Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion (Reflection III)
Jesus went out with his disciples across the Kidron valley to where there was a garden, into which he and his disciples entered. Judas his betrayer also knew the place, because Jesus had often met there with his disciples. So Judas got a band of soldiers and guards from the chief priests and the Pharisees and went there with lanterns, torches, and weapons. John 18:1–3
In the quiet of the garden, the Passion of the Son of God began. With full knowledge of what lay ahead, Jesus willingly embraced suffering. Today, we pause to commemorate His unfathomable final hours. God the Son, co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit, took on human nature through the Blessed Virgin Mary, living fully as one of us, yet without sin. His earthly mission culminated on that first Good Friday when He accepted betrayal, mockery, scourging, condemnation, and death on the Cross. Though He would rise three days later, restoring life and hope, today we are invited to reflect on His Passion and sacrificial love.
Among the many virtues Christ embodied, His sacrificial love—also called charity—is the synthesis of all virtue, which is revealed most fully through His Passion. As we contemplate the mystery of His love, we are called not only to receive it but also to imitate it, no matter how incomprehensible it may seem.
The word “love” expresses many human experiences. In Scripture, four Greek words are translated as “love.” Agapē is selfless, sacrificial love that seeks the good of the other at personal cost. Philia is the bond of friendship; eros is romantic desire; and storgē is the natural affection within families. While each reflects an important aspect of human life, only agapē fully captures the selfless love Christ embodied in His Passion.
This agapē—sacrificial love—shines throughout Jesus’ final hours. His presence in Jerusalem for the Passover was no accident; He came as the spotless Lamb, willingly laying down His life. In the Garden of Gethsemane, knowing Judas would soon arrive with soldiers and guards, Jesus could have fled, but He did not. Instead, He entered His Passion willingly, “knowing everything that was going to happen to him…” (John 18:4).
Throughout the night, Jesus endured betrayal, mockery,
Peter’s denial, and the high priests’ unjust interrogation. In the morning, He
stood before Pilate, who reluctantly gave in to pressure and ordered Jesus’
scourging. After being crowned with thorns and mocked as a king, Jesus stood
again before Pilate, bloodied and beaten.
Through all this, Jesus’ sacrificial love never faltered. He returned mercy for hatred, compassion for mockery, and forgiveness for judgment. Without faith, these responses appear shocking—confounding both His enemies and His followers. Such love transcends human understanding; it requires grace to perceive its wisdom.
When Pilate ordered His crucifixion, Jesus carried His own Cross by His own will, driven by sacrificial love and Divine Wisdom. At that moment, perhaps only He and His Blessed Mother fully understood the unfolding mystery. Though many would grasp it later, in that moment, most could not comprehend His sacrificial love.
As we behold the culmination of Jesus’ perfect Sacrifice, gaze upon His crucifixion with the deepest gratitude. Look beyond the blood and horror to see an utterly selfless and sacrificial love. Jesus offered the perfect atoning sacrifice for sin, opening the way to eternal life. Yet His sacrifice is more than an offering for our salvation; it is also a model for us to follow, an invitation to live in imitation of His love, made possible by His grace.
Reflect today on Jesus’ invitation to share in His act of sacrificial love. Receive the gift of salvation He accomplished by His blood; then, ponder how God is calling you to live sacrificially. Forgive without reserve, abandon selfishness, and live sacrificially for others. Lay down your life freely—with courage, humility, and compassion. Once sanctified, focus on the salvation of others. This form of love requires the divine wisdom of sacrificial love to elevate your mind and will beyond what human nature can comprehend or choose.
Most Holy Lamb of God, Your love, guided by the perfection of divine Wisdom, surpassed every lower form of human love. Your Sacrifice atoned for my sins and those of the whole world. May I not only receive this gift of atonement in my life, but also imitate it in my actions so that You will save many souls through me. Jesus, I trust in You.
Good Friday 2023
Then he handed him over to them to be crucified. So they took
Jesus, and, carrying the cross himself, he went out to what is called the Place
of the Skull, in Hebrew, Golgotha. There they crucified him, and with him two
others, one on either side, with Jesus in the middle. John 19:16–18
The Passion of our Lord begins. Our Gospel narrative today begins with Jesus going out to a garden with His disciples after the celebration of the Passover meal. It’s shocking to consider that the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity permitted such injustice to befall Him. Though perfect in every way, He allowed Himself to be treated as a criminal, to suffer at the hands of sinners, and to die an agonizing death.
One of the first shocking events to take place in the Garden where Jesus was arrested was the sheer number of soldiers sent to arrest Him. A “band of soldiers” could mean that as many as 600 soldiers were sent to accomplish this deed. Going out with “lanterns, torches and weapons” reveals that it was dark. The symbolism of darkness is significant in John’s Gospel, portraying the spiritual darkness that permeated that night. Within that darkness, one of Jesus’ own Apostles betrayed Him, leading this massive number of soldiers to arrest Him.
Upon Jesus’ arrest, Peter, the soon-to-be leader of the Apostles, denies, for the first time, that he even knows Jesus. This happens while Jesus is interrogated by Annas, a respected former High Priest. The fact that a High Priest was the first to question Jesus shows that even those who are “religious” can, at times, be brutal instruments of attacks upon the faith. After Annas, Jesus is brought to Caiaphas, then acting as High Priest. During that interrogation, Peter denied our Lord a second time and then a third. These religious leaders concluded that Jesus must die. Recall that Caiaphas had previously argued that “it is better for you that one man should die instead of the people” (John 11:50). In fact, those words of Caiaphas were an unintended prophecy, predicting the death of our Lord for all the people.
Since the Jewish authorities did not have the power to crucify someone, they relied on the Roman governor Pilate. Although Pilate shows little interest in meeting their request, He does so out of fear of an uprising and reprisals from Caesar. Pilate also humiliates Jesus, scourging Him and permitting his soldiers to mock Him. Little did they know that the purple cloak with which they covered Jesus and the crown of thorns they placed on His head were symbols of Jesus’ true Kingship, exercised by His defeat of death itself in the battle for the salvation of souls.
When Jesus was crucified, He hung on the Cross between two thieves. As He agonized for three hours, He permitted His mother to stand by Him, entrusted her to the disciple John and John to her, drank of the wine to quench His thirst, spoke His final words, “It is finished,” and then He bowed His sacred head and handed over His spirit.
John’s Gospel relates to us that after Jesus was dead, a soldier pierced His side with a lance, and blood and water flowed out. This final gift from our Lord has been understood as a symbol of the Sacraments of Baptism and the Eucharist. It was truly finished. The King had won the battle. Death was defeated, and the means by which we are to share in that victory was given by the institution of the Sacraments.
Reflect, today, upon this most sacred scene. There is no end to the depth and breadth of the meaning of every action that took place that holy day. Every detail reveals the love of God. Every symbol points to the reality of what took place. Every word our Lord spoke is for us to hear, to receive and to believe. The meaning of Good Friday is beyond our human comprehension. Nonetheless, on this holy day we are called to prayerfully penetrate the meaning of this perfect act of love, so that we will more fully share in the grace given to us by our Lord.
My crucified Lord, from the perspective of human beings, Your death was horrific. But from the perspective of Your Father in Heaven, Your death was the glorious fulfillment of His will. Through Your Passion and death, You exercised Your Kingship by taking authority over sin and death and commanding it to cease. May I stand with Your dear mother this day, dear Lord, and gaze with gratitude and awe on what You have done for me. Jesus, I trust in You.
Good Friday "It is finished"
Opening Prayer:
Jesus, who died on the Cross for me, have mercy on me, a sinner. Your Passion
and Death overwhelm me with grief and sorrow for my sins. Grant me the grace to
hear and respond to your word.
Encountering Christ:
1. The New Adam: Jesus, our Savior,
has died for us. In his life and death, he became the new Adam. In the Garden
of Gethsemane, Jesus began to undo Adam’s original sin in the Garden of Eden.
There Jesus bore the punishment God gave to Adam, who was cursed to toil by the
sweat of his brow (Genesis 3:19). Jesus toiled and sweat until he bled: “He was
in such agony and he prayed so fervently that his sweat became like drops of
blood falling on the ground” (Luke 22:44). The thorns that the ground yielded
because of Adam’s sin (Genesis 3:18) rose up to crown Jesus’s head in mockery.
Finally, Jesus destroyed the eternal punishment for our sins, starting with the
first sin when our first parents ate the fruit of the forbidden tree. Christ
Our Lord became sin itself, hanging on a tree in a garden (2 Corinthians 5:21).
2. Lamb of God: There on the Cross, Jesus reigns as our King. Throughout his Passion, he was interrogated, mocked, scourged, and vilified. The soldiers crowned him with thorns and wrapped him in a purple robe of nobility to mock him, but just as Isaiah prophesied, Jesus, the suffering servant, was meek and endured their abuse: “Though harshly treated, he submitted and did not open his mouth; Like a lamb led to the slaughter or a sheep silent before shearers, he did not open his mouth” (Isaiah 53:7). Jesus led like a lamb to the slaughter, became our Paschal Lamb.
3. Signs of Mercy: Christ’s final words from the Cross proclaimed his victory: “It is finished” (John 19:30). His mission of salvation through his Passion and Death was complete. Jesus, the suffering servant, “was pierced for our sins, crushed for our iniquities. He bore the punishment that makes us whole, by his wounds we were healed” (Isaiah 53:5). Immediately after he handed over his spirit, he was pierced, and the signs of God’s Divine Mercy were released: “one soldier thrust his lance into his side, and immediately blood and water flowed out” (John 19:34). Just as Adam’s bride was taken from a rib from his side during deep sleep (Genesis 2:21-22), the bride of Christ–the Church–was born from the Blood of the new covenant and the waters of Baptism that gushed from his side when he was in the deep sleep of death.
Conversing with Christ: Jesus, today we roll the stone across your tomb. Grant us the courage to be stouthearted and wait, facing your tomb, hoping for your Resurrection and our salvation. Thank you for coming to save us and for dying for our sins in our place. Help us, your Church, to be your sign of mercy in the world.
Hôm nay, chúng ta tưởng niệm cuộc Khổ Nạn của Chúa Giêsu Kitô. Cuộc hành trình Thương khó của Ngài, bắt đầu tại nhà Tiệc Ly với Bí Tích Thánh Thể, Vườn Cây Dầu, các cung điện của Cai Pha thầy cả thượng tế, và vua Hêrôđê, Dinh thự của quan tổng trấn Philatô, đồi Calvary (núi sọ) nơi Chúa đã chết và ngôi mộ bỏ hoang. Ở trong mỗi một nơi và ở trong những địa điểm này, tất cả chúng ta, mỗi người chúng ta đã làm cho Chúa Giêsu Kitô đã phải chịu đau khổ cách này hay cách khác và Ngài đã phải chết đẻ cứu chuộc chúng ta.
Lạy Chúa Giêsu, Đấng Cứu Thế của chúng con, với hai bàn tay của chúng con , chúng con sẽ bảo vệ Chúa với đôi bàn tay của Chúa đã ban ho chúng con, Chúng con sẽ vinh danh Chúa trong vinh quang với trí thông minh của chúng con, và chúng con sẽ ngưỡng mộ Chúa bằng với tất cả trái tim của chúng con. Chúng con sẽ làm những điều đó với Mẹ. Lạy Mẹ Maria mẹ của chúng con xin cầu cho chúng con.
Today, breathe taken, we commemorate the Passion of Jesus Christ. His itinerary; the Cenacle of the Eucharist, the Garden of Olives, the palaces of Caifas and Herrod, the Pretoria of Pilate, Calvary of his death and the tomb. In each one of these places, between us all, we have made him suffer.
God could have redeemed us in a thousand different ways. He chose the path of suffering to the point of giving up his life. "To give ones life" is the greatest show of Love there is. There is no improvising here: it was prophesized in the Old Testament, Jesus made reference to it many times; in the Last Supper He gave us the present as food, his "Body which will be given up"; at Gethsemane He prays and sais "yes" to God the Father. On the Cross, very consciously, says YES again, giving up his spirit with total freedom and serenity.
Jesus, my Saviour, I will look after you with my hands, I will defend you with my arms, I will give you glory with my intelligence, and I will adore you with all my heart. I will do it with your, Our, blessed Mother, Mary.
Standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary of Magdala. When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son.” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother.” And from that hour the disciple took her into his home. John 19:25–27
If God invited you to be present at one moment in the Scriptures, to see it with your eyes, hear it with your ears, and experience it with your heart, what moment would that be? Certainly, Gabriel’s announcement to Mary, Christ’s birth, a miracle, or a sermon would be awe-inspiring. The moment, however, that perhaps best manifests pure and perfect love is the love shared between Mother and Son during Jesus’ three hours on the Cross.
Throughout His life, Jesus’ mother was uniquely privileged to know Him like no other. She bore Him in her womb, nursed Him at her breast, bathed Him as a child, fed Him, watched Him grow, and was attentive to His every virtue. As His ministry attracted both great attention and harsh criticism, her Immaculate and motherly Heart remained perfectly attentive to Him and His mission.
As tensions rose during the week of Passover, her motherly intuition filled her Immaculate Heart with an intertwining of the most holy love and sorrow imaginable. When Jesus was arrested, the pain was deeper than any human heart had ever suffered, and her resolve to be present at her Son’s Passion was stronger than any earthly force could stop. No fear, threat, or sorrow could keep her from accompanying her Son to the very end. In perfect union with the will of God, Mary’s love was unwavering. Her silent presence at the Cross became a testament to the boundless strength of maternal devotion. Just as she had embraced Jesus in the joy of His Nativity, she now held Him in her heart during His Passion, standing as both witness and participant in the work of redemption.
As Jesus looked down at her from the Cross upon which He hung, the human consolation He received from His mother’s gaze was all He needed. Her love and affection were His only remaining earthly possessions. Stripped bare, nailed to the Cross, and suffocating, His mother’s love could not be taken from Him. Yet Jesus came to give all out of love—everything He possessed, including His mother. Out of love, Jesus entrusted her to John, the beloved disciple—and through him, to all of us—so that we might receive her as our own mother.
As He looked at her with the deepest love ever shared between two people, He called her “Woman”—“Woman, behold your son.” By calling her “Woman,” Jesus revealed the fulfillment of her identity in salvation history. She was the woman foretold in Genesis and the woman revealed in the vision of Revelation. In that moment, when the heavens were torn open and grace poured down upon the world, Jesus’ mother fulfilled her role as the New Eve, the new Mother of all the Living. She became the Mother and protector of all God’s children, interceding for them with unparalleled love and participating in the mediation of God’s grace. To John, who stood by her, Jesus said, “Behold, your mother.” With that, He thirsted, drank the bitter wine on a sprig of hyssop, cried out, “It is finished!,” bowed His head, and handed over His spirit.
As we celebrate this Good Friday, fix your gaze upon the moment when human love, united with divine love, was revealed to the world in the most sacred way. The love between this Mother and Son, alongside the gift of His mother and the New Eve to all of us, embodies the selfless nature of divine love. Ponder this mystery. Pray that you may be spiritually drawn into that moment. Gaze upon their love and hear the Messiah, the Son of God, say to you: “Behold, your mother.” Hearing, believing, and responding to those words makes you present at that moment when love was perfected and salvation poured forth upon the world.
Most generous Lord, as You suffered upon the Cross, having nothing left in this world but Your mother, You entrusted her to us to be our mother, so that we could participate in the love that You and she shared. I do behold her as my mother, and You as my King and God. I love You and thank You with all my heart for the unfathomable gift You have given me. Jesus, I trust in You.
The Cup of Consummation
Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion (Reflection II)
After this, aware that everything was now finished, in order that the Scripture might be fulfilled, Jesus said, “I thirst.” There was a vessel filled with common wine. So they put a sponge soaked in wine on a sprig of hyssop and put it up to his mouth. When Jesus had taken the wine, he said, “It is finished.” And bowing his head, he handed over the spirit. John 19:28–30
The Passover meal Jesus shared with His disciples on Holy Thursday was not merely a commemoration of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt. It was the fulfillment of all that the first Passover prefigured and the establishment of the New and Perpetual Passover in Christ, the Lamb of God and Eternal High Priest.
The Old Testament Passover followed strict prescriptions: The lamb had to be without blemish, symbolizing purity, and its blood was sprinkled on the altar to recall Israel’s protection from the angel of death. Families ate the lamb with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, accompanied by four cups of wine. Each cup symbolized a stage in God’s promises made in Exodus 6:6–7:
Second Cup (Deliverance): “I will deliver you.”
Third Cup (Redemption): “I will redeem you.”
Fourth Cup (Praise or Consummation): “I will take you as my own.”
These promises are fulfilled in Christ’s offering, signifying our freedom from sin, deliverance from evil, redemption through His sacrifice, and consummation in His eternal Kingdom.
At the Last Supper, Jesus altered the structure of this ancient meal, instituting the Eucharist. With the third cup, the Cup of Redemption, He declared, “This is my body, which will be given for you” (Luke 22:19) and “This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which will be poured out for you” (Luke 22:20). Through these words, Christ revealed that He was the true Passover Lamb, offering His Body and Blood for the salvation of the world.
The Cross becomes the altar of the New Passover. Jesus, the unblemished Lamb and High Priest, offers His life as the perfect sacrifice for the redemption of souls. Each time we celebrate the Eucharist, we mystically partake of this perpetual offering, receiving the true Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world. The four cups of the New Passover are fulfilled in the Sacrifice of the Mass: God frees us from sin, delivers us from evil, redeems us through His Blood, and takes us to Himself in love.
Reflect today on Christ’s words from the Cross: “It is finished.” In other words, it is consummated! See Him inviting you to be united with His Blessed Mother as her child, a member of His Body, the Church. Hear His thirst for your soul, and behold the Lamb of God as He drinks the Cup of Consummation, completing His work of redemption. May His finished work transform your life, drawing you ever deeper into His life-giving love.
Holy Lamb of God and High Priest, You offered Your life as the perfect and perpetual Sacrificial Lamb, the lamb without blemish, for the salvation of souls. Draw me into the great mystery of redemption. Open my eyes to see what You have done, and open my heart to the abundant grace poured forth upon me. You are my God, my Messiah, my Lord, and my Savior. Jesus, I trust in You.
Sacrificial Love
Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion (Reflection III)
Jesus went out with his disciples across the Kidron valley to where there was a garden, into which he and his disciples entered. Judas his betrayer also knew the place, because Jesus had often met there with his disciples. So Judas got a band of soldiers and guards from the chief priests and the Pharisees and went there with lanterns, torches, and weapons. John 18:1–3
In the quiet of the garden, the Passion of the Son of God began. With full knowledge of what lay ahead, Jesus willingly embraced suffering. Today, we pause to commemorate His unfathomable final hours. God the Son, co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit, took on human nature through the Blessed Virgin Mary, living fully as one of us, yet without sin. His earthly mission culminated on that first Good Friday when He accepted betrayal, mockery, scourging, condemnation, and death on the Cross. Though He would rise three days later, restoring life and hope, today we are invited to reflect on His Passion and sacrificial love.
Among the many virtues Christ embodied, His sacrificial love—also called charity—is the synthesis of all virtue, which is revealed most fully through His Passion. As we contemplate the mystery of His love, we are called not only to receive it but also to imitate it, no matter how incomprehensible it may seem.
The word “love” expresses many human experiences. In Scripture, four Greek words are translated as “love.” Agapē is selfless, sacrificial love that seeks the good of the other at personal cost. Philia is the bond of friendship; eros is romantic desire; and storgē is the natural affection within families. While each reflects an important aspect of human life, only agapē fully captures the selfless love Christ embodied in His Passion.
This agapē—sacrificial love—shines throughout Jesus’ final hours. His presence in Jerusalem for the Passover was no accident; He came as the spotless Lamb, willingly laying down His life. In the Garden of Gethsemane, knowing Judas would soon arrive with soldiers and guards, Jesus could have fled, but He did not. Instead, He entered His Passion willingly, “knowing everything that was going to happen to him…” (John 18:4).
Through all this, Jesus’ sacrificial love never faltered. He returned mercy for hatred, compassion for mockery, and forgiveness for judgment. Without faith, these responses appear shocking—confounding both His enemies and His followers. Such love transcends human understanding; it requires grace to perceive its wisdom.
When Pilate ordered His crucifixion, Jesus carried His own Cross by His own will, driven by sacrificial love and Divine Wisdom. At that moment, perhaps only He and His Blessed Mother fully understood the unfolding mystery. Though many would grasp it later, in that moment, most could not comprehend His sacrificial love.
As we behold the culmination of Jesus’ perfect Sacrifice, gaze upon His crucifixion with the deepest gratitude. Look beyond the blood and horror to see an utterly selfless and sacrificial love. Jesus offered the perfect atoning sacrifice for sin, opening the way to eternal life. Yet His sacrifice is more than an offering for our salvation; it is also a model for us to follow, an invitation to live in imitation of His love, made possible by His grace.
Reflect today on Jesus’ invitation to share in His act of sacrificial love. Receive the gift of salvation He accomplished by His blood; then, ponder how God is calling you to live sacrificially. Forgive without reserve, abandon selfishness, and live sacrificially for others. Lay down your life freely—with courage, humility, and compassion. Once sanctified, focus on the salvation of others. This form of love requires the divine wisdom of sacrificial love to elevate your mind and will beyond what human nature can comprehend or choose.
Most Holy Lamb of God, Your love, guided by the perfection of divine Wisdom, surpassed every lower form of human love. Your Sacrifice atoned for my sins and those of the whole world. May I not only receive this gift of atonement in my life, but also imitate it in my actions so that You will save many souls through me. Jesus, I trust in You.
The Passion of our Lord begins. Our Gospel narrative today begins with Jesus going out to a garden with His disciples after the celebration of the Passover meal. It’s shocking to consider that the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity permitted such injustice to befall Him. Though perfect in every way, He allowed Himself to be treated as a criminal, to suffer at the hands of sinners, and to die an agonizing death.
One of the first shocking events to take place in the Garden where Jesus was arrested was the sheer number of soldiers sent to arrest Him. A “band of soldiers” could mean that as many as 600 soldiers were sent to accomplish this deed. Going out with “lanterns, torches and weapons” reveals that it was dark. The symbolism of darkness is significant in John’s Gospel, portraying the spiritual darkness that permeated that night. Within that darkness, one of Jesus’ own Apostles betrayed Him, leading this massive number of soldiers to arrest Him.
Upon Jesus’ arrest, Peter, the soon-to-be leader of the Apostles, denies, for the first time, that he even knows Jesus. This happens while Jesus is interrogated by Annas, a respected former High Priest. The fact that a High Priest was the first to question Jesus shows that even those who are “religious” can, at times, be brutal instruments of attacks upon the faith. After Annas, Jesus is brought to Caiaphas, then acting as High Priest. During that interrogation, Peter denied our Lord a second time and then a third. These religious leaders concluded that Jesus must die. Recall that Caiaphas had previously argued that “it is better for you that one man should die instead of the people” (John 11:50). In fact, those words of Caiaphas were an unintended prophecy, predicting the death of our Lord for all the people.
Since the Jewish authorities did not have the power to crucify someone, they relied on the Roman governor Pilate. Although Pilate shows little interest in meeting their request, He does so out of fear of an uprising and reprisals from Caesar. Pilate also humiliates Jesus, scourging Him and permitting his soldiers to mock Him. Little did they know that the purple cloak with which they covered Jesus and the crown of thorns they placed on His head were symbols of Jesus’ true Kingship, exercised by His defeat of death itself in the battle for the salvation of souls.
When Jesus was crucified, He hung on the Cross between two thieves. As He agonized for three hours, He permitted His mother to stand by Him, entrusted her to the disciple John and John to her, drank of the wine to quench His thirst, spoke His final words, “It is finished,” and then He bowed His sacred head and handed over His spirit.
John’s Gospel relates to us that after Jesus was dead, a soldier pierced His side with a lance, and blood and water flowed out. This final gift from our Lord has been understood as a symbol of the Sacraments of Baptism and the Eucharist. It was truly finished. The King had won the battle. Death was defeated, and the means by which we are to share in that victory was given by the institution of the Sacraments.
Reflect, today, upon this most sacred scene. There is no end to the depth and breadth of the meaning of every action that took place that holy day. Every detail reveals the love of God. Every symbol points to the reality of what took place. Every word our Lord spoke is for us to hear, to receive and to believe. The meaning of Good Friday is beyond our human comprehension. Nonetheless, on this holy day we are called to prayerfully penetrate the meaning of this perfect act of love, so that we will more fully share in the grace given to us by our Lord.
My crucified Lord, from the perspective of human beings, Your death was horrific. But from the perspective of Your Father in Heaven, Your death was the glorious fulfillment of His will. Through Your Passion and death, You exercised Your Kingship by taking authority over sin and death and commanding it to cease. May I stand with Your dear mother this day, dear Lord, and gaze with gratitude and awe on what You have done for me. Jesus, I trust in You.
2. Lamb of God: There on the Cross, Jesus reigns as our King. Throughout his Passion, he was interrogated, mocked, scourged, and vilified. The soldiers crowned him with thorns and wrapped him in a purple robe of nobility to mock him, but just as Isaiah prophesied, Jesus, the suffering servant, was meek and endured their abuse: “Though harshly treated, he submitted and did not open his mouth; Like a lamb led to the slaughter or a sheep silent before shearers, he did not open his mouth” (Isaiah 53:7). Jesus led like a lamb to the slaughter, became our Paschal Lamb.
3. Signs of Mercy: Christ’s final words from the Cross proclaimed his victory: “It is finished” (John 19:30). His mission of salvation through his Passion and Death was complete. Jesus, the suffering servant, “was pierced for our sins, crushed for our iniquities. He bore the punishment that makes us whole, by his wounds we were healed” (Isaiah 53:5). Immediately after he handed over his spirit, he was pierced, and the signs of God’s Divine Mercy were released: “one soldier thrust his lance into his side, and immediately blood and water flowed out” (John 19:34). Just as Adam’s bride was taken from a rib from his side during deep sleep (Genesis 2:21-22), the bride of Christ–the Church–was born from the Blood of the new covenant and the waters of Baptism that gushed from his side when he was in the deep sleep of death.
Conversing with Christ: Jesus, today we roll the stone across your tomb. Grant us the courage to be stouthearted and wait, facing your tomb, hoping for your Resurrection and our salvation. Thank you for coming to save us and for dying for our sins in our place. Help us, your Church, to be your sign of mercy in the world.

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