In St. Luke’s Gospel sharp contrasts are drawn between
the ‘right’ people and the ‘wrong’ people. Or maybe we should say between the
people who we think are right and the people who we think are wrong. Just consider the
parables in this Gospel: the self-righteous Pharisee and the penitent Tax
Collector, the Prodigal who repents and the dutiful son who can only envy, the
Good Samaritan, a pariah among the Jews yet the only one who loves his
neighbor. It is in Luke’s Gospel that a sinful woman washes the feet of Jesus
causing the Pharisee Simon to be scandalized. The wrong people end up being the
right people; the right people end up being the wrong people.
The most striking contrast is found at the
beginning of the Gospel: the contrast between Zechariah and Our Lady. Zechariah is a priest engaged in
the offering of incense in temple, when the angel Gabriel announces to him that
his barren wife will bear a son. Zechariah disbelieves: “How can this be?
For I am an old
man, and my wife is advanced in years.” The same angel appears to a nobody, a
teenage girl, who also asks 'how can this be' but she says finally to the angel “be it unto me according to thy
word.”
It is perhaps surprising that there is no
mention of the Mother of Jesus at the foot of the Cross in Luke’s Passion. But
there is a profound connection between the Annunciation and the Passion of
Christ. Both Matthew and Mark also record the
words of Jesus: “not my will but thine be done.” But only in Luke does an angel
appear to strengthen Jesus and to connect his fiat with that of his Mother.
The apostles, the right people you would think,
manage to sleep that night. In Gethsemane he asks them to watch, but three
times he finds them sleeping. And then a fourth time on the Mount of Olives ‘he
found them asleep.’ We might say that they never woke up. They slept through the
whole thing.
The irony is not just a matter of being absent
at the death of a friend. The irony is that Jesus had told them again and again
that they must share his Cross, participate in his Passion and Death. But Jesus
makes do with what he has at hand, as usual the wrong people. First Simon of
Cyrene, a tourist in town for the holidays, certainly not a follower of Jesus, who
is made to carry the Cross. He did not ask for it because crosses are not
sought but given. If Peter and the others will not ‘take up his cross and
follow Jesus, then some other poor banished child of Eve will have to shoulder
the burden. If we will not take up our cross and follow Him, he will find
others who will.
So too if we will not preach the Gospel, Jesus will,
as he did from the Cross. One man listened and heard, and he turns toward Jesus. One of the criminals
crucified with him makes a genuine request of Jesus: “Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy
kingdom.” Another irony: when Jesus sat at the table on Maundy Thursday, he
told his apostles to watch for the coming of the kingdom: “for, I
tell you, I shall not eat it again until there is fulfillment in the kingdom of
God.” The wrong guy gets it; the right guys don’t.
This man who hangs on
the cross next to Jesus knows something about participation in the Cross, for he
"shares the same condemnation" yet clearly distinguishes between his
well-earned suffering and the completely different suffering of the One
"who has done nothing wrong". In this situation some of the grace of the
pain of crucifixion can overflow into others. And it continues to over flow
after Jesus' death: the centurion is affected by that grace, and Luke
even says that the crowd ''All who were assembled for that spectacle returned,
beating their breasts."
In Luke, the centurion
at the foot of the cross (unlike in Mark and Matthew) exclaims, “Surely, this
man was innocent.” If that is true, then we are guilty. Not just the Jews, not
just the Romans but all of us and what condemns us is the grace of the divine mercy which flows from Jesus on the
Cross.
Whereas Matthew and
Mark report only Jesus' cry of abandonment, Luke's account of Jesus' words from
the Cross carries a different tone. It is as if we hear, translated into spoken
words, what the Word of God essentially accomplishes and intends by his
suffering. First he requests of his Father: "Forgive them, for they know
not what they do." The Jews are blinded, they fail to recognize their Messiah.
The Gentiles do professionally what they have done a thousand times over: crucify
a supposed criminal in accord with military orders. We are guilty bystanders. In
fact no one knows who Jesus is. His request aims at excusing those who are
culpable, and it finds a reason to excuse: 'they know not what they do." His words to the thief are part of the
grace of forgiveness earned on the Cross. His dying words, "into your
hands, Father, I commend my spirit" replace the cry of abandonment found
in the other gospels. Even if the Son no longer senses the Father, even if the
Father's hands have become imperceptible, he has no other place to place
himself. In Jesus' words Luke
allows something of the grace so painfully won for us to radiate from the
Cross.
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