Fr. Ted Bobosh
Christ … for my sake fell asleep on the cross (Lenten hymn)
The imagery of some Orthodoxy hymns about the crucifixion of
Christ, seem all too pleasant … Jesus falls asleep on the Christ. No
mention of the agony and torture he would have suffered. Many icons
reflect that same calm demeanor. It was Christian humanism of the
Middle Ages which really took an interest in the suffering and agony
of Christ and began to describe and portray the agony and torture
which crucifixion is. Read the biblical texts and we see that the
bodily suffering of Christ is hardly mentioned. It was the focus on
Christ’s humanity which was seen as realism, that started Christians
moving away from a focus on Jesus as the incarnate God. Instead of
seeing God, all that was seen was another human dying a painful death.
The image
of Christ falling asleep on the cross is deeply rooted in the theology
that God is passionless. God is not moved by emotions and their
visceral affects on us – God doesn’t have a body so does not
experience emotions like we do. God does not love us as a reaction to
us for God is love. God dying on the cross does not change His
reaction to humans: He continues to love them. And so Jesus says while
dying on the cross, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”
(Luke 23:34) He came into the world because of divine love and dies
on the cross for the same reason (John 3:16-17). Christ doesn’t
forgive in reaction to what his tormentors are doing for He came into
the world as love in order to forgive humans.
God is love, and doesn’t wait to see what we will do before
reacting to us. God always acts towards us in love. God becomes
incarnate because God is love. God dies on the cross because God is
love. The crucifixion does not change God’s relationship to the world.
Sin does not change God’s reaction to humans. God forever acts in
love toward humans no matter how humans behave. As another Lenten
hymn says:
In
Your compassion You humbled Yourself, and were lifted on the cross
raising up with Yourself the one who had fallen of old through eating
from the tree. Therefore, You are glorified, Lord, alone greatest in
love, and we sing Your praises forever!
God loves humanity and accepts that love means God will suffer for
us humans. God suffers for us, with us and in us. God does this for
our salvation. God is not changed by our sin, by our reaction to God,
by our rejection of God, by our crucifying God’s Son. God is love.
Thus the Passionless God suffers the passion as one of the great
mysteries of God’s love. And because it is God on the cross, the
suffering is infinitely deep, yet God is still love and God continues
to act toward us in love. This is why the icon is so correct in
portraying the sleeping Christ on the cross – divinity suffers in us
and for us and with us in all eternity and yet this does not change
God’s love for it is God’s love for us.
“He
who does not love does not know God; for God is love. In this the
love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son
into the world, so that we might live through him. In this is love,
not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the
expiation for our sins.” (1 John 4:8-10)
Icon from here
God even takes on a human body and experiences all the pain, sorrow and torment of being human because this is God’s love for us. It is a love infinitely and eternally deep – yet it is the love that God offers to us and invites us to share with Him so that our life, and our suffering, becomes our life in God. God dying on the cross is still love, and still loving us.
Christ lives and dies for Adam, Eve and each of us. The hymns of Lent often move from images of God dealing with Adam to God dealing with each of us.
I
have fallen into the heavy sleep of sin through heedlessness, but, my
Christ, Who for my sake fell asleep on the cross, awaken me, that the
night of death not come on me.
Christ’s death on the cross is the sign of the blessed Sabbath Day
on which the Lord rests for His work for us and for our salvation is
complete. Christ sleeps on the cross in order to awaken us from the
sleep of death and to awaken us from our having fallen asleep in the
world when we should be awake, alert and vigilant. In Christ we awake
from our sleep whether in this world or the world to come.
In Christ dying on the cross we see God’s love for us undisturbed
by the sin of the world, encouraging us to unite ourselves to Him so
that whether we live or die we belong to the Lord.
“If
we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord; so
then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s. For to
this end Christ died and lived again, that he might be Lord both of
the dead and of the living.” (Romans 14:8-9)
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