The Second Sorrowful Mystery
The Scourging
1. Think
about the manner in which Jesus was scourged. His chaste body is
stripped by the jeering soldiers, His hands are tied and He is bound to a
pillar. The soldiers come forward with their whips and begin to beat
Him mercilessly. As His blood flows freely to the ground, Jesus quivers
with pain and emits a half-suppressed groan. But fresh blows continue to
rain down on His bruised flesh. So the prophecy is fulfilled in which
Isaias described the punishment of the chosen people, whose sins and
whose chastisement the divine Redeemer has chosen to take on Himself.
“For the sole of the foot unto the top of the head, there is no
soundness therein: wounds and bruises and swelling sores…” (Isaias 1:6)
By means of this fearful torment Jesus willed to offer satisfaction in a
special manner for the sins of the flesh. In ancient times sins of
impurity provoked the anger of God so much that they were blotted out by
the universal deluge. Now these sins are still numberless both in the
pagan and, unfortunately, in the Christian world, but they are washed
away by the saving blood of Jesus Christ, Who came on earth to make
reparation for all the iniquities of men.
Kiss the wounds of
Jesus, bleeding and suffering. Ask for pardon if you have on occasions
failed to preserve the purity of your body, the dwelling of your
immortal soul and the tabernacle of the Holy Spirit. Resolve to die
rather than stain again with impurity the soul which was redeemed and
sanctified by the precious blood of the Redeemer.
2. The Saints
voluntarily imposed on themselves floggings and other severe penances,
which would make us shudder in modern times, in order to control their
bodily impulses and to expiate along with Jesus the sins of their
fellow-men. Today the pleasure-loving world cries out against such
barbaric folly and extravagance. But you who are a Christian, educated
in the school of Christ crucified, know that suffering has a mission in
your life, that mortification is necessary for the control of the body.
We must make sacrifices in order to combat our evil impulses. We should
avoid weakness and self-indulgence. Let us always remember that we are
followers of Christ crucified and should therefore be prepared to
chastise our bodies, even to the point of undergoing martyrdom, if this
is necessary in order to avoid sin and to preserve our chastity.
3. Tradition holds that Mary followed Jesus through the various stages
of His passion. It is impossible to believe that she would have
abandoned Him in these tragic hours. She must at least have known of the
cruel flogging which He endured, and while His body was being torn by
lashes she was, most probably, not far away, participating by her
maternal sorrow in her Son’s torment. Here, then, was a double martyrdom
– the martyrdom of blood and the martyrdom of tears. Life demands the
shedding of blood and the shedding of tears.
What are the motives
which cause you sorrow in life? Are yours the tears of unsated
ambition, of frustrated caprice, or of discouragement in time of
trouble? Such tears are not worthy of a Christian. His should be tears
of repentance for his sins and tears of love for Jesus and Mary.
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