The Crucifixion
“He was oppressed, and He was afflicted, yet He opened not
His mouth; He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her
shearers is dumb, so He opened not His mouth.” Isaiah liii. 7.
“St. Peter makes it almost a description of a Christian,
that he loves Him whom he has not seen; speaking of Christ, he says, ‘whom
having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye
rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory.’ Again he speaks of ‘tasting
that the Lord is gracious.’ [1 Pet. i. 8; ii. 3.] Unless we have a true love of
Christ, we are not His true disciples; and we cannot love Him unless we have
heartfelt gratitude to Him; and we cannot duly feel gratitude, unless we feel
keenly what He suffered for us. I say it seems to us impossible, under the
circumstances of the case, that any one can have attained to the love of Christ,
who feels no distress, no misery, at the thought of His bitter pains, and no
self-reproach at having through his own sins had a share in causing them.
I know quite well, and wish you, my brethren, never to
forget, that feeling is not enough; that it is not enough merely to feel and
nothing more; that to feel grief for Christ's sufferings, and yet not to go on
to obey him, is not true love, but a mockery. True love both feels right, and
acts right; but at the same time as warm feelings without religious conduct are
a kind of hypocrisy, so, on the other hand, right conduct, when unattended with
deep feelings, is at best a very imperfect sort of religion. And at this time
of year especially are we called upon to raise our hearts to Christ, and
to have keen feelings and piercing thoughts of sorrow and shame, of compunction
and of gratitude, of love and tender affection and horror and anguish, at the
review of those awful sufferings whereby our salvation has been purchased.
Let us pray God to give us all graces; and while, in the first place, we pray that He would
make us holy, really holy, let us also pray Him to give us the beauty of holiness, which consists in
tender and eager affection towards our Lord and Saviour: which is, in the case
of the Christian, what beauty of person is to the outward man, so that through
God's mercy our souls may have, not strength and health only, but a sort of
bloom and comeliness; and that as we grow older in body, we may, year by year,
grow more youthful in spirit.
You will ask, how
are we to learn to feel pain and anguish at the thought of Christ's sufferings?
I answer, by thinking of them, that
is, by dwelling on the thought. This,
through God's mercy, is in the power of every one. No one who will but solemnly
think over the history of those sufferings, as drawn out for us in the Gospels,
but will gradually gain, through God's grace, a sense of them, will in a
measure realize them, will in a measure be as if he saw them, will feel towards
them as being not merely a tale written in a book, but as a true history, as a
series of events which took place. It is indeed a great mercy that this duty
which I speak of, though so high, is notwithstanding so level with the powers
of all classes of persons, learned and unlearned, if they wish to perform it.
Any one can think of Christ's sufferings, if he will; and knows well what to
think about. ‘It is not in heaven that thou shouldst say, Who shall go up for
us to heaven and bring it to us, that we may hear it and do it? Neither is it
beyond the sea that thou shouldst say, Who shall go over the sea for us? ...
but the word is very nigh unto thee;’ very nigh, for it is in the four Gospels,
which, at this day at least, are open to all men. All men may read or hear the
Gospels, and in knowing them, they will know all that is necessary to be known
in order to feel aright; they will know all that any one knows, all that has
been told us, all that the greatest saints have ever had to make them full of
love and sacred fear.
Now, then, let me make one or two reflections by way of
stirring up your hearts and making you mourn over Christ's sufferings, as you
are called to do at this season.
First, as to these sufferings you will observe that our Lord
is called a lamb in the text; that is, He was as defenceless, and as innocent,
as a lamb is. Since then Scripture compares Him to this inoffensive and
unprotected animal, we may without presumption or irreverence take the image as
a means of conveying to our minds those feelings which our Lord's sufferings
should excite in us. I mean, consider how very horrible it is to read the
accounts which sometimes meet us of cruelties exercised on brute animals. Does
it not sometimes make us shudder to hear tell of them, or to read them in some
chance publication which we take up? At one time it is the wanton deed of
barbarous and angry owners who ill-treat their cattle, or beasts of burden; and
at another, it is the cold-blooded and calculating act of men of science, who
make experiments on brute animals, perhaps merely from a sort of curiosity. I
do not like to go into particulars, for many reasons; but one of those
instances which we read of as happening in this day, and which seems more
shocking than the rest, is, when the poor dumb victim is fastened against a
wall, pierced, gashed, and so left to linger out its life. Now do you not see
that I have a reason for saying this, and am not using these distressing words
for nothing? For what was this but the very cruelty inflicted upon our Lord? He
was gashed with the scourge, pierced through hands and feet, and so fastened to
the Cross, and there left, and that as a spectacle. Now what is it moves our very
hearts, and sickens us so much at cruelty shown to poor brutes? I suppose this
first, that they have done no harm; next, that they have no power whatever of
resistance; it is the cowardice and tyranny of which they are the victims which
makes their sufferings so especially touching. For instance, if they were
dangerous animals, take the case of wild beasts at large, able not only to
defend themselves, but even to attack us; much as we might dislike to hear of
their wounds and agony, yet our feelings would be of a very different kind; but
there is something so very dreadful, so satanic in tormenting those who never
have harmed us, and who cannot defend themselves, who are utterly in our power,
who have weapons neither of offence nor defence, that none but very hardened
persons can endure the thought of it. Now this was just our Saviour's case: He
had laid aside His glory, He had (as it were) disbanded His legions of Angels,
He came on earth without arms, except the arms of truth, meekness, and
righteousness, and committed Himself to the world in perfect innocence and
sinlessness, and in utter helplessness, as the Lamb of God. In the words of St.
Peter, ‘Who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth; who, when He was
reviled, reviled not again; when He suffered, He threatened not; but committed
Himself to Him that judgeth righteously.’ [1 Pet. ii. 22, 23.] Think then, my
brethren, of your feelings at cruelty practised upon brute animals, and you
will gain one sort of feeling which the history of Christ's Cross and Passion
ought to excite within you. And let me add, this is in all cases one good use
to which you may turn any accounts you read of wanton and unfeeling acts shown
towards the inferior animals; let them remind you, as a picture, of Christ's
sufferings. He who is higher than the Angels, deigned to humble Himself even to
the state of the brute creation, as the Psalm says, ‘I am a worm, and no man; a
very scorn of men, and the outcast of the people.’ [Ps. xxii. 6.]
Take another example, and you will see the same thing still
more strikingly. How overpowered should we be, nay not at the sight only, but
at the very hearing of cruelties shown to a little child, and why so? for the
same two reasons, because it was so innocent, and because it was so unable to
defend itself. I do not like to go into the details of such cruelty, they would
be so heart-rending. What if wicked men took and crucified a young child? What
if they deliberately seized its poor little frame, and stretched out its arms,
nailed them to a cross bar of wood, drove a stake through its two feet, and
fastened them to a beam, and so left it to die? It is almost too shocking to
say; perhaps, you will actually say it is
too shocking, and ought not to be said. O, my brethren, you feel the horror of
this, and yet you can bear to read of Christ's sufferings without horror; for
what is that little child's agony to His? and which deserved it more? which is
the more innocent? which the holier? was He not gentler, sweeter, meeker, more
tender, more loving, than any little child? Why are you shocked at the one, why
are you not shocked at the other?
…And now … Let us suppose that some aged and venerable
person whom we have known as long as we could recollect any thing, and loved
and reverenced, suppose such a one, who had often done us kindnesses, who had
taught us, who had given us good advice, who had encouraged us, smiled on us,
comforted us in trouble, whom we knew to be very good and religious, very holy,
full of wisdom, full of heaven, with grey hairs and awful countenance, waiting
for Almighty God's summons to leave this world for a better place; suppose, I
say, such a one whom we have ourselves known, and whose memory is dear to us,
rudely seized by fierce men, stripped naked in public, insulted, driven about
here and there, made a laughing-stock, struck, spit on, dressed up in other
clothes in ridicule, then severely scourged on the back, then laden with some
heavy load till he could carry it no longer, pulled and dragged about, and at
last exposed with all his wounds to the gaze of a rude multitude who came and
jeered him, what would be our feelings? Let us in our mind think of this person
or that, and consider how we should be overwhelmed and pierced through and
through by such a hideous occurrence.
But what is all this to the suffering of the holy Jesus,
which we bear to read of as a matter of course! Only think of Him, when in His
wounded state, and without garment on, He had to creep up the ladder, as He
could, which led Him up the cross high enough for His murderers to nail Him to
it; and consider who it was that was
in that misery. Or again, view Him dying, hour after hour bleeding to death; and
how? in peace? no; with His arms stretched out, and His face exposed to view,
and any one who pleased coming and staring at Him, mocking Him, and watching
the gradual ebbing of His strength, and the approach of death. These are some
of the appalling details which the Gospels contain, and surely they were not
recorded for nothing; but that we might dwell on them.
Do you think that those who saw these things had much heart
for eating or drinking or enjoying themselves? On the contrary, we are told
that even ‘the people who came together to that sight, smote their breasts and
returned.’ [Luke xxiii. 48.] If these were the feelings of the people, what
were St. John's feelings, or St. Mary Magdalene's, or St. Mary's, our Lord's
blessed mother? Do we desire to be of this company? do we desire, according to
His own promise, to be rather blessed than the womb that bare Him, and the paps
that He sucked? do we desire to be as His brother, and sister, and mother? Then, surely, ought we to have some portion of that mother's sorrow! When
He was on the cross and she stood by, then, according to Simeon's prophecy, ‘a
sword pierced through her soul.’ [Luke ii. 35.] What is the use of our keeping
the memory of His cross and passion, unless we lament and are in sorrow with
her? I can understand people who do not keep Good Friday at all; they are
indeed very ungrateful, but I know what they mean; I understand them. But I do
not understand at all, I do not at all see what men mean who do profess to keep it, yet do not
sorrow, or at least try to sorrow. Such a spirit of grief and lamentation is
expressly mentioned in Scripture as a characteristic of those who turn to
Christ. If then we do not sorrow,
have we turned to Him? ‘I will pour
upon the house of David,’ says the merciful Saviour Himself, before He came on
earth, speaking of what was to come, ‘upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the
spirit of grace and of supplications; and they shall look upon Me whom they
have pierced, and they shall mourn
for Him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for Him,
as one that is in bitterness for his first-born.’ [Zech. Xii. 10.]
One thing I will add:—if there be persons here present who
are conscious to themselves that they do not feel the grief which this season
should cause them, who feel now as they do at other times, let them consider
with themselves whether perhaps this defect does not arise from their having
neglected to come to church, whether during this season or at other times, as
often as they might. Our feelings are not in our own power; God alone can rule
our feelings; God alone can make us sorrow, when we would but cannot sorrow;
but will He, if we have not
diligently sought Him according to our opportunities in this house of grace? I
speak of those who might come to prayers more frequently, and do not. I know
well that many cannot come. I speak of those who can, if they will. Even if
they come as often as they are able, I know well they will not be satisfied with their own feelings; they
will be conscious even then that they ought to grieve more than they do; of
course none of us feels the great event of this day as he ought, and therefore
we all ought to be dissatisfied with
ourselves. However, if this is not our own fault, we need not be out of heart,
for God will mercifully lead us forward in His own time; but if it arises from
our not coming to prayers here as often as we might, then our coldness and
deadness are our own fault, and I beg
you all to consider that that fault is not a slight one. It is said in the Book
of Revelation, ‘Behold He cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see Him, and
they also which pierced Him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because
of Him.’ [Rev. i. 7.] We, my, brethren, every one of us, shall one day rise
from our graves, and see Jesus Christ; we shall see Him who hung on the cross,
we shall see His wounds, we shall see the marks in His hands, and in His feet,
and in His side. Do we wish to be of those, then, who wail and lament, or of
those who rejoice? If we would not lament at the sight of Him then, we must
lament at the thought of Him now. Let us prepare to meet our God; let us come
into His Presence whenever we can; let us try to fancy as if we saw the Cross
and Him upon it; let us draw near to it; let us beg Him to look on us as He did
on the penitent thief, and let us say to Him, ‘Lord remember me when Thou
comest in Thy kingdom.’ [Luke xxiii. 42.]
Let this be added to the prayer, my brethren, with which you
are about to leave this church. After I have given the blessing, you will say
to yourselves a short prayer. Well; fancy you see Jesus Christ on the cross,
and say to Him with the penitent thief, ‘Lord, remember me when Thou comest in
Thy kingdom;’ that is, ‘Remember me, Lord, in mercy, remember not my sins, but
Thine own cross; remember Thine own sufferings, remember that Thou sufferedst
for me, a sinner; remember in the last day that I, during my lifetime, felt Thy
sufferings, that I suffered on my cross by Thy side. Remember me then, and make
me remember Thee now.’”
~John Henry Newman
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