THE FOURTH WORD
ABOUT the ninth hour our Lord Jesus cried with a loud voice, "My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" He cried with a loud voice, that He
might be easily heard by all, and also that by this wondrous word He might shake
off from our souls the sleep of sloth, and cause them to wonder and marvel at
the immeasurable goodness of God to us. Therefore He saith, "My God, My God, why
hast Thou forsaken Me?" For the sake of vile sinners, for evil and thankless
servants, for sinful and disobedient deceivers, Thou hast forsaken Thy beloved
Son and most obedient Child. That Thy enemies, who are vessels of wrath, might
be changed into children of adoption, Thou hast slain Thine own Son, and given
Him over to death like one guilty. "O my God, why, I pray Thee, hast Thou
forsaken me?" For the very cause why men ought to praise and give thanks to
Thee, and love Thee with an everlasting love; because Thou hast delivered Thy
dear Son to death for their redemption, and sacrificed Him willingly, for this
reason they will find ground for blasphemy and reproach against Thee, saying,
"He saith He is the Son of God. Let God deliver Him now if He will have Him."
Why, O my God, hast Thou willed to spend so precious a treasure for such vile
and counterfeit goods? Besides, this word may be understood to have been spoken
by Christ against those who seek to diminish the glory of His Passion, by saying
that it was not really so bitter and terrible, owing to the great support and
comfort which He drew from His Godhead. Let those who speak and think thus know
that they renew His Passion and crucify Him afresh. It was to prove the error of
such men that our Lord cried with a loud voice, and said, "My God, My God, why
hast Thou forsaken Me?" It is as if He had said these words to His own Divine
nature, with which He formed one Person—for the Godhead of the Father and of
the Son is all one—wondering, Himself, at His own love, which had so cast Him
down and worn Him out and humbled Him, and that He who brings help to all
mankind should have forsaken Himself, and offered Himself to suffer every kind
of pain, impelled thereto by conquering love alone. Again, we should not be
wrong, if we were to interpret this word which Christ spoke out of the exceeding
bitterness of His sorrow in the following way—namely, that His spirit and
inward man, taking upon itself the severe judgment of God upon all sinners, and
at the same time discerning clearly and feeling and measuring in Himself the
intolerable weight of His Passion, on this account cried out in a sorrowful
voice to His Father, and complained tenderly to Him because He had been cast
into these dreadful torments; as if the goodness of His Father had become so
embittered against the sins of men, that in the ardour of His justice He had
quite forgotten the inseparable union between His passible humanity and His
impassible Godhead, and therefore in the zealousness of His justice had quite
given up His passible nature to the cruelty and malice of fierce men, that they
might waste it away and destroy it. For this reason, therefore, He said, "My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" This word has besides an inward
meaning, according to which Christ, in His sensitive parts, complained to His
Father that He had been forsaken by Him. For as many as contend for His honour,
and endure patiently the troubles of this world, our merciful God so moderates
and tempers their crosses and afflictions by the inpouring of His divine
consolation, that by His sensible grace He makes their crosses hardly felt; but
He left His own beloved Son quite without any comfort, and so deprived Him of
all consolation and light, that He endured as much in His human nature as had
been ordained by the Eternal Wisdom, according to the strictness of justice, as
much as was needed to atone for so many sins. And indeed our salvation was the
more nobly and perfectly achieved, in that it was done and finished without any
light at all, in absolute resignation and abandonment. For a chief cause of the
Passion was to show clearly how great was the injury and insult brought upon His
most high Godhead by the sins of the human race. Now as the knowledge of Christ
was greater and more acute than that of all other beings, in heaven or in earth,
so much the greater and heavier was His sorrow and agony. Nay more—what is more
wonderful than anything—whatever afflictions have been endured by all the
saints, as members of Christ, existed much more abundantly in Christ their Head;
and this I wish to be understood according to the spirit and reasonably. For all
the saints have suffered no more than flowed in upon them through Christ, joined
to them as His members, who communicated to them His own afflictions. For He
took upon Himself the afflictions of all the saints, out of His great love for
His members, and wondrous pity, and He suffered far greater internal anguish
than any of the saints, nay, more even than the blessed Virgin, His mother, felt
her own sharp sorrow and sickness of heart. For if an earthly father loves his
child so much, that in fatherly pity he takes upon himself the sorrows of his
child, and grieves for them as if he suffered them himself, what must have been
Christ's Cross and compassion for the affliction of His members, and above all,
of those who suffered for His name's sake? Truly He bore witness to His members,
how much He suffered from their afflictions, and how great was His inward pity
for their sufferings, when He took all their debt upon Himself, and abolished
all the penalties which they had merited, so that they might depart free. The
same is most amply proved by the words which He spoke to St Paul, when He said,
"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?" For the persecution which Saul had
stirred up against the disciples, the members of the Lord, was not less grievous
to Him than if He had suffered it Himself. Therefore He says to His friends and
members, "He who touches you, touches the apple of Mine eye." For is there
anything suffered by the members, which the Head does not suffer with them, He
whose nature is goodness, and whose property is always to have mercy and to
forgive?
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