Preacher: Fr Simon Yong SJ
Just as well that we launch this year’s
Novena with a subject central to the Year of Mercy. The issue for the first day
is “Comforting the Afflicted”. Even though the Catechism of the Catholic Church
lists it as one of the Spiritual Acts of Mercy (CCC. 2447), it is scriptural as
St Paul himself counselled that one should rejoice with those who rejoice and
the weep with those who weep (Rom 12: 15).
Closer to the truth and contrary to St
Paul’s exhortation is this quote of an American poetess Ella Wilcox: “Laugh,
and the world laughs with you; weep, and you weep alone”. It is always easier to do something, anything
when confronted by a sorrowful situation not of ours or not personal. If caring
is taken to mean sharing, then you would understand why not acting can be or is
frequently equated as not caring enough. Thus, consoling the sorrowful or
comforting the afflicted is not for the feeble. Someone sent me a light-hearted
cartoon of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane: He comes back after praying to the
Father only to see the Disciples doing something quite familiar to all of us
and He exclaimed: “Can you not watch for an hour without texting”?
At the heart of this spiritual act of
mercy is a notion of sacramentality or an expression of sacramental presence.
What do I mean by that? The person who listens and is present to the afflicted
becomes an image of Christ who bore our suffering and carried our sorrows. The
Latin root of the word compassion carries this same idea—to suffer with, much
like the word to empathise.
However, corporal acts of mercy are much
easier to handle because they involve a distancing. For example, an explanation
given about why a nation where the people are so friendly is that their friendliness
is a protective act of distancing much like giving water to the thirsty a way
of projecting a Christ-like behaviour which fulfils an obligation but without
getting too much involved. “I am a Christian and I have done my duty. What more
can you ask”? Perhaps it explains why when faced with a catastrophe like the
previous massive flood in the East Coast, the easiest (even if it may be
painful) is to reach into the pocket or to get out the chequebook. And, of
course, the best thing was we witnessed the outpouring of sympathy expressed
through the accumulation of donated goods—canned food, expired or not, clothes,
used or otherwise etc), and at times charity organisations will tell you that
people give what they have no need of anymore. That deed of giving acts as a
kind of guilt-salving which sends the message that “In so-doing, I have behaved
in a Christian manner”.
Our reluctance to embrace the suffering of
the afflicted may find its provenance in the air we breathe—an
alpha-achievement atmosphere that is aided by a technology-obsessed culture. We
are conditioned into winning all the time—and only winning can validate our
existence. Think “kiasu”. The alpha-achievement fear of losing is driven to
achieve and to succeed. It is not difficult to carry that mentality into the
culture of mercy. Whenever someone is hurting, we try to cure the hurt and
remove it. Inaction would come across as failure.
The backdrop of this roadmap to
achievement and success is a lifestyle of comfort and convenience. To
paraphrase John Paul II, “the evil use of advertising techniques has stimulated
the natural inclination to avoid hard work by promising the immediate
satisfaction of every desire." We all crave greater comfort as well as
convenience and nothing should stand in the way of this quest. Why do you think
that the acceptance of euthanasia is on the rise? Is it because we have become
more merciful to those who are suffering. We hear this often, do we not? “Yeah,
it is terrible to watch her suffer. It would be more merciful to end that
suffering”.
But, sorrow and suffering are both
characteristic marks human existence and as JPII pointed out, we naturally have
a natural inclination to avoid them but when they are taken to be signs of
weakness, our “success-driven” narrative will measure achievement through the
efficiency with which we annihilate them. Perhaps you begin to realise how easy
it is to buy into the relevancy of euthanasia. We not only abort and euthanise
everything that makes us suffer but we also run away from anything that reminds
us of our powerlessness.
Benedict XVI in Spes salvi tells us that
“It is not by sidestepping or fleeing from suffering that we are healed, but
rather by our capacity for accepting it, maturing through it and finding
meaning through union with Christ, who suffered with infinite love”. The
ability to suffer and embrace our personal suffering is the first step towards
this spiritual act of mercy. If you like, in the face of sorrows and
tribulations, our power comes not from our prowess but from our powerlessness
before God.
Thus, powerlessness in the face of sorrow
and affliction is not a sign of failure. Instead, it becomes an impetus for
charity and an act of deep faith in God. When Christ hung on the Cross, He
forgave the Good Thief but He did not change the status of the Good Thief who
in fact hung on even longer and had to have his leg broken in order to hasten
his death. Likewise, in the many cases of sorrow encountered, we can do nothing
to change the situation but our absence, like the Disciples deserting Jesus
after His arrest, might just increase the sorrow of the sufferer. Think of the
proverb: shared joy is doubled whilst shared grief is halved.
Do not look at your inability to solve the
problem, to remove the sorrow or restore what was lost as a weakness but rather
look at it as a strength to communicates a faith in God who knows what it is to
suffer. Comforting the afflicted sends this message out loud: You are not
alone. I am with you is sacramental proof that God is with you.
Finally, St Teresa de Jesus has this to
say: Christ has no body now but yours. No hands, no feet on earth but yours.
Yours are the eyes through which he looks compassion on this world. Yours are
the feet with which he walks to do good. Yours are the hands through which he
blesses all the world. Yours are the hands, yours are the feet, yours are the
eyes, you are his body. Christ has no body now on earth but yours.”
It is easy to become His hands and feet
when we engage in charitable works. We can readily address the physical needs
of those who suffer. We do it and it makes us feel good about it and about us. But,
what about the invisible and more spiritual aspect of mercy? Here, something
may be said here about the eyes as window to the soul. Thus, the Christian
challenge in a materialistic world bent on banishing pain and suffering is to
become His Soul with compassionate eyes so that one may also enter and touch
the soul of the one who suffers.
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