Are you seeking to know and cherish God? The medieval Dominican mystic St. Catherine of Siena asserts that there is no superior method than prayer. “Through such prayer, the soul is connected with God, walking in the path of Christ crucified, and through longing and tenderness and the bond of love, he transforms her into another version of himself,” she clarifies.
We follow Our Lord’s last journey while engaging in the Stations of the Cross. However, this devotion is not merely a simple remembrance. Through these stations, we can experience a profound and personal connection with him. Dominican Father A.G. Sertillanges states, “We can adopt the range of perception and the feelings he had, seeing through his eyes and experiencing through his heart, recalling, assessing, and anticipating alongside him, so that, with this same idea of envisioning that we have exchanged positions with him, it is no longer we who exist, but Christ who exists within us.”
The Stations of the Cross assist us in deepening our comprehension of the Eucharistic mystery. In engaging with them, may we grow in our love for Jesus and approach him, who is genuinely present in the sacrament of his body and blood.
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First Station: Jesus receives the sentence of death
R. We adore you, O Christ, and we praise you. (Genuflect)V. Because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.
“Then Jesus emerged, adorned with the crown of thorns and the purple robe. And [Pilate] addressed them, ‘Look, the man!’”Jn 19:5).
Jesus is judged and seen as weak by the world. Bruised and whipped, he faces Pilate, who interrogates him. A king? This individual? Jesus is vulnerable. He has no army at his side. Where is his dominion? “Crucify him,” the mob cries out. Yet Jesus does not retreat. He has always remained committed to his purpose of rescuing those entrusted to him by the Father.
And this is the path of Jesus. He approaches us, rendering himself open to harm. Look, this is our monarch. He yields himself to the cross. This is invariably the case with love. It is delicate. Love involves the chance of harm and contempt.
“Look at him who removes the sins of the world,” proclaims the priest during Mass as he raises the consecrated host for everyone to witness. In the Eucharist, Jesus presents himself before us once more. We recognize him. Faith enables us to perceive our sovereign.
He is unprotected. He is exposed within that holy host. He has given his life for us.
It is the path of affection.
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Second Station: Jesus bears the cross
R. We adore you, O Christ, and we praise you. (Genuflect)V. Because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.
“Bearing the cross on his own, he went out to the location known as the Place of the Skull”Jn 19:17).
He bent beneath its pressure. The sail of demise had been imposed upon him. It was a load far too great for anyone else to bear.
But it wasn’t his. It belonged to us.
“Carry one another’s loads” his existence proclaimed. How frequently he stooped to ease the burden of wrongdoing! To soothe the turbulent waters of our souls. To grant a restorative kindness. To pardon.
The identical blessings arrive in the Eucharist. It is the true sustenance of compassion. It refreshes and fortifies. And due to the presence of the Eucharist, we can continue to persevere in this world of transgression.
His burden? It was ours. Yet only Jesus could bear its heaviness. And due to his bearing that burden, no cross that we encounter is insurmountable.
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Third Station: Jesus stumbles for the first time
R. We adore you, O Christ, and we praise you. (Genuflect)V. Because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.