We cannot help but suffer with everyone else, because
whether we are aware of it or not, we are actually interconnected with
one another. When one suffers, everybody else also suffers. Yes, we
suffer too.
This truth about ourselves can be described in many ways:
that we are in the same boat, we belong to the same body, we are
actually one family, we cannot help but live in some communion among
ourselves.
Let’s remember what St. Paul said in this regard. “If one
part suffers, every part suffers with it. If one part is honored,
every part rejoices with it.” (1 Cor 12,26) And this is made possible
because God has designed us to be so.
We actually form not only one body in Christ but also
parts of the very body of Christ, who is the pattern of our humanity
and the savior of our damaged humanity. As such, he assumed all the
suffering of all men due to sin. Christ is the very epitome of what is
known as “vicarious suffering,” since he, who need not suffer, chose
to suffer for us and with us.
If we want to conform ourselves to this pattern and savior
of our humanity, then we ought to have the same attitude Christ had
and continues to have toward the suffering of men. We have to learn to
choose to suffer for and with one another! We have to be eager to have
the vicarious suffering for the others.
And these days, with so many suffering around, we should
realize that we have a golden opportunity to identify ourselves more
with Christ by suffering with and for the others.
In this regard, it would be good if we are always aware of
the suffering of others. We should be pro-active in this. We should
not just wait for others to tell us they are suffering. We have to
take the initiative.
And our own suffering should not prevent us from thinking
also of the suffering of the others. In fact, our own suffering would
become useful and more bearable if we go through it with the suffering
of the others, offering it to God and making it part of the continuing
suffering of Christ that is meant for our redemption.
Thus our suffering that we convert also as a vicarious
suffering for the others would also become a share of the redemptive
suffering of Christ. With this understanding of suffering, our fear of
it disappears, and instead of fear, we would have an eager desire for
it. Suffering becomes a very positive element in our life.
Just as Christ embraced his suffering, his cross and his
death, so should be our attitude toward all kinds of suffering,
whether it is ours or those of others. We should suffer with and for
everybody else. This way, we suffer with Christ also. We identify
ourselves with him more, and our suffering becomes redemptive.
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