7 words of Jesus from the cross: 4) I am thirsty
7 words for 7 days
The seven words of Christ from the Cross.
4) I am thirsty
These are words which touched the life of many saints. Mother Teresa
made of them the motto and the centre of her spirituality. 20 years
before Mother Teresa also Don Orione had commented on them. Christ is
thirsty: that which is a normal physical need becomes the sign of a
deep burning spiritual desire. Just a few hours earlier in the garden
he had said: “Father, if it is possible, let this chalice pass from
me: yet not mine but your will be done”. And now that chalice he
wants to drink it to the end. His greatest desire is not to fulfill
the will of his Father, that is to save everyone. Even those who, as
it is written in the gospel, they offer him vinegar. Christ suffers
in its body but is suffering much more in seeing those who are still
far from his love. His sufferance becomes the instrument to quench
that spiritual thirst. This is not masochism but the highest level of
love.
All of us, sometimes, experience the desire to do something more for
God, the desire to be better people, more active, but then we
acknowledge our weaknesses, our lack of strength and so all stops
there. We experience often also moment of sufferance of many kinds,
sickness, old age, defeats, misunderstandings, delusions. All of
these make us suffer, they are an extra reason to set aside our
relationship with God. Jesus, instead, from his cross tells us the
opposite: it is through those sufferances that we can improve our
relationship with God, we can become better people and more active
Christians.
From
the words of St. Luigi Orione: “From
the cross Christ cries: "I am thirsty!" A terrible cry of
deep thirst that is not of the flesh, but rather the cry of thirst
for souls,
and it is through this thirst for our souls that Christ dies”. …
“We
must follow the steps of Jesus up to Calvary, and then climb the
Cross with him or at the feet of the Cross die for love with Him and
for Him.
We must thirst for martyrdom. Serving in men the Son of man”.