November 1994 - JOHANNINE HOURS - Luke 23,33-49 [The "Johannine hours" are meant as a way of seeking God in silence and prayer in the midst of our daily life. During the course of a day, take a moment to read the Bible passage with the short commentary and to reflect on the questions which follow. Afterwards, a small group people can meet to share what they have discovered and perhaps for a time of prayer.] To renew our trust in God, we need to contemplate what is at the heart of our faith, the dead and risen Christ. In his body, Jesus brought the love of God to places where God seemed to be absent. He experienced anguish, failure, being abandoned by almost all his close friends, humiliation, torture, exclusion and a violent death. He knows what it means to be nothing any longer. He speaks to us from the very last place of all humanity. "He wanted to make our sins his own" (St Augustine). Jesus' last words help us to understand the two inner attitudes he maintains to the very end. Toward human beings, he expresses forgiveness and intercession (23,34). To God, he entrusts everything into his hands; he calls him "Father" to the last; he continues to trust in the One who can create new life even out of this situation (23,46). Luke tells us how those who saw Jesus die were deeply moved. Looking at the cross means welcoming within ourselves the two attitudes Jesus persevered in until his very last breath and in this way taking part in his mystery. He entrusts this mystery to us so that we can live it out in the world. It is true that our forgiveness is not always total. And when we call God "Father," our trust can remain fragile, this trust in God who gives us life, who can create something new and who invites us to dare to be creators in our turn. But it is important to remember that Christ welcomes the little we have and makes up what is lacking. He forgives with us. By his Spirit, he says with us and in us: "Father!" Q: Where do I find the wellsprings of Christ's forgiveness? Q: How can forgiveness be a priority in our Christian communities? Q: Am I familiar with this experience: continuing, even in a difficult situation, to call God "Father," in other words to trust in him? Did this trust help me to deal with suffering and even to find new life in the midst of it? email address taize@cpe.ipl.fr ---- file: /pub/resources/text/Taize/johannine: jh9411.txt