We get some idea
of the importance of this
article of the Creed from St.
Paul’s statement to the
Corinthians, that “I judged not
myself to know anything among
you, but Jesus Christ, and Him
crucified” (I Corinthians 2:2).
Christ’s Passion,
death, and burial should be
deeply understood. They are the
crowning proof of God’s love for
us. They are also the most
powerful motive for our loving
God, and the model of how we are
to love Him in return.
There are four
verbs in this article, and each
deserves a volume of
explanation. Jesus Christ
suffered; He was
crucified, died, and was
buried.
The narrative of
Christ’s Passion in the gospels
amounts to a total of four
hundred verses, excluding
Christ’s five-chapter discourse
at the Last Supper, given by St.
John. The sheer amount of
revealed data indicates the
importance of the Redeemer’s
sufferings, in the mind of the
Holy Spirit who inspired the
Sacred Scriptures.
Sufferings of
Christ
Suffering is the
experience of pain. It is the
bodily and spiritual experience
of what we naturally dislike,
the conscious endurance of what
we find disagreeable, and the
mental awareness that we are
undergoing what is against our
spontaneous human desires.
Immediately we
see that we can react in two
opposite ways to a painful
experience. We can either resist,
or we can patiently endure what
we experience. In fact, patience
is the willing endurance of pain.
Christ’s sufferings, we know,
were borne with patience. This
deserves some explanation and is
most clearly seen in the hours
of His bloody agony in the
Garden of Olives.
He naturally
shrank from pain, no less than
we do. After all, He was truly
human. This becomes evident from
the prayer He addressed to His
heavenly Father when He begged.
“If you are willing, take this
chalice from me.” But having
said this, He promptly added,
“Nevertheless let your will be
done, not mine.” Thereupon, “an
angel appeared to Him, coming
from heaven, to give Him
strength” (Luke 22:42-43).
The first part of
Christ’s prayer was the
expression of His human feelings,
the instinctive and involuntary
dread of pain. The second part
was the manifestation of His
patience, the voluntary
acceptance of what His natural
feelings dreaded. And the
appearance of the angel came
after He had spoken His
resignation to the will of the
Father. The angel, be it noted,
did not remove the pain but
provided Him with additional
strength for His will to bear
the suffering with patient
resignation to the will of God.
So we might
go through the whole account of
the sufferings of Jesus, from
the agony in Gethsemane to the
crucifixion on Calvary. Christ’s
sufferings were always both in
the body and in the soul. In the
body was the pain caused by
emotional reaction to being
scourged and crowned with thorns,
being forced to carry a heavy
cross and then nailed to the
Cross and allowed to die by
having the body totally drained
of its blood.
In the soul was
the pain of rejection and
humiliation, of opposition by
His enemies and abandonment by
His friends, of a sense of
failure at seeing so many
clamoring for His death, who
only a few days before were
praising Him to the skies, of
the cruel ingratitude from the
very people for whom He had done
so much, even to working
numerous miracles in their
favor.
To all of this
present suffering that Jesus
experienced during the hours of
His Passion in Palestine, we
must add the pain He endured by
anticipating the future. Even as
man, He foresaw that multitudes
in the centuries to come would
ignore the sufferings and reject
His grace. Yet He bore all of
this pain patiently with His
human will, while all His
instinctive human feelings
recoiled at the very thought of
so much agony.
The Crucifixion. Among
the Jews, no form of death was
considered more disgraceful than
crucifixion. And among the pagan
Romans, no form of execution was
considered more painful than to
be crucified.
What needs
to be stressed is that Christ
chose to be crucified. Both on
the level of humiliation and of
agonizing pain, He chose to
undergo crucifixion because he
wanted to show His love for us
in the extreme. It cannot be
emphasized too much that when
revelation tells us Jesus chose
the Cross, this is no mere
symbolism or figure of speech.
The Savior had every option
possible – either to redeem us
without suffering, or to redeem
by experiencing pain; again,
either to suffer or suffer to
the limit of human ingenuity to
inflict emotional and physical
pain. He chose the outer limits
of agony, and did so with
perfect freedom.
We say that
Christ endured the Cross, and
the expression is correct
enough. But it does not fully
express what actually occurred.
It was not only the passive,
even the patient endurance of
the inevitable: It was the
conscious and deliberate choice
of what Jesus need not have
suffered at all. Yet He decided
with His mind and freely chose
with His will what He knew was
the worst form of pain.
Death of Christ. It
may seem strange to profess that
Christ was not only crucified,
but that He died. What are we
saying? We are saying that Jesus
redeemed the world from sin by
enduring the consequences of
sin, which are death.
The sin of our
first parents deprived them and
their descendants of the
supernatural life they possessed
before they fell. Already in
Genesis, they were told by God
that in whatever day they
disobeyed Him they would die.
Eve was reassured by the devil
that God was not telling the
truth. She prevailed upon Adam
to join her in resisting the
divine will.
The inevitable
happened. Bodily death entered
the world through the devil’s
instigation, as the visible
result of the spiritual death
that took place with the first
grave offense committed against
God by human beings.
When Christ
decided to redeem us, He chose
the very form of penalty that,
as God, He had laid on a sinful
human race. His bodily death on
Calvary, therefore, was not
coincidental: It was deeply
providential. It was expiation
by God become man by suffering
for our sake the price of our
redemption.
What occurred
when Jesus died? It was the
separation of His human soul
from His human body. There was
no question of Christ’s humanity
being for a moment separated
from the Second Person of the
Trinity. Although His body and
soul were separated from each
other, both remained united with
His Divinity. Thus every drop of
blood that Jesus shed on Calvary
was literally the blood of the
living God.
Burial in the Grave. The
burial of Christ’s body was
consistent with His predestined
plan of man’s redemption, and
all four evangelists tell the
story of where and how Jesus was
buried.
The initiative
for burying the Savior came from
Joseph of Arimathea, a
councillor of high rank and a
disciple of Jesus. He went
boldly to Pilate to ask for the
body. Pilate wondered if Jesus
was already dead. So he sent for
the centurion who witnessed the
crucifixion. “And when he
learned from the centurion that
He was, he granted the body to
Joseph” (Mark 15:45). Joseph
then took the body down from the
Cross. He wrapped it in a clean
linen cloth and laid it in his
own new tomb that had been hewn
out of the rock. Then he rolled
a large stone across the
entrance of the tomb. With
Joseph at the burial was also
Nicodemus, who had first come to
Jesus by night for fear of the
Jews. Watching the burial were
Mary, the mother of Jesus, and
Mary Magdalene.
The detailed
account of the burial verified
that Christ was truly dead: that
He was completely wrapped up in
a shroud; that His body was
placed in a stone tomb; and that
the tomb was sealed with a huge
rock.
We are further
told that the day after the
burial, the chief priests and
the Pharisees went in a body to
Pilate. They told the
procurator:
“That
deceiver said, while he was
yet alive, ‘After three days
I will rise again.’ Give
orders, therefore, that the
sepulchre be guarded until
the third day, or else his
disciples may come and steal
him away, and say to the
people, ‘He has risen from
the dead’; and the last
imposture will be worse than
the first.” Pilate said to
them, “You have a guard; go,
guard it as well as you know
how.” So they went and made
the sepulchre secure,
sealing the stone and
setting the guard (Matthew
27:63-66).
All of these
details are priceless evidence
that the resurrection of Christ
on Easter Sunday was an
historical fact