Thursday, September 13, 2007

The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ (1821)

Mel Gibson got a lot of flack about his interpretation of the passion of Jesus in his movie The Passion of the Christ. Many people were unaware that most of that movie was indeed inspired by the visionary book of the venerated (pre-Saint) nun, Anne Catherine Emmerich, called The Dolorous (or Sorrowful) Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Emmerich, herself, was illiterate. But a well known poet of the time, Clemens Brentano, was brought into her life and wrote down her visions as she had them. He would re-write and edit the visions with her so she would approve his wording.

The process of having the visions was extremely painful for Emmerich, who welcomed the suffering as she had a life-long yearning to participate in the passion of Jesus. This dedication and selflessness was rewarded with the vision of Jesus' passion, crucifixion and resurrection in complete and amazing detail. However, with each vision she also experienced the emotions involved.

The visions are so detailed and exact that one cannot help but believe them as true. The book relates such detail from descriptions of the simple bridges crossed when walking near the Garden, to Pilate's house, Herod's palace, neighborhoods and how all of the people in the bible intertwine with this blessed event. She states that the Ark of the Convenant was, at one time, housed in the same building as was held the Last Supper. She states that the same cave used to hide after the Garden of Gethsemane was the same cave used by Adam and Eve to hide after the fall. She mentions the chalice used at The Last Supper was an antique that was stored on Noah's Ark and survived the flood. The visions encompass and expound the stories in the bible, but never contradict them.

It is an amazing book, plain and simple.

I have often believed that a human's ability to understand the spiritual realm is equivalent to an ant trying to understand the subtly of human existence. An ant may know we are there and that we have some power over them when we want, but they know nothing nor can they comprehend human emotion, relationships, goals, dreams, etc.


Sister Anne & Clemens Brentano

The same ignorance, I believe, is what humans have when we try to understand the divine. I always go back to my favorite quote from Thomas A Kempis', which states "There is nothing more insignificant to God than human wisdom." After all, we, in our own arrogance and ignorance believe that God works as we do, that because we are created in His image that He, therefore, must approach life the way we do. We feel we know so much when, in reality, we know so very little.

I've always believed that, if you could imagine God as an artist, His pallet is full of wonderful colors and, by comparison, the human palette merely contains various shades of gray. God can use all of His existence to express Himself... nature, angels, weather, free will, His will, comets, galaxies, the universe itself are all individual colors available to Him in His palette. We can barely understand the complexities of human existence and are incapable of God's options. The simple constraint of time means we struggle to understand actions, consequences and events that occur over multiple generations. But, for God, our centuries are but a second.

What is beautiful about The Dolorous Passion is that it feels like we're getting a glimpse into this big picture. Since time has no meaning to God, when we see tying of Adam to Jesus, from Noah to the Last Supper, from David to Nicodemus, of Roman soldiers to Jesus infancy and his very birth, etc., it all makes sense in some much larger level... like by reading the bible we have understood the players in the story, but not the grandeur and the connections of the story itself... it's the difference between understanding a movie trailer and understanding the movie in its entirety.

Emmerich's visions of Jesus visiting Purgatory, Limbo and Hell after his crucifixion and before his resurrection are riveting, daunting, scary and, on some level, familiar and true.

Reading this book has been a wonderful experience and I strongly suggest anyone looking for a better, fuller understanding of their faith to take the time to visit the wonderful visions of Sister Anne Catherine Emmerich.

You will never forget it.

2 comments:

Cricket said...

As I read this I was reminded of the disciples on the road to Emmaus where the risen Jesus explains the scriptures to the two travelers! How their hearts were burning as He discussed all that related to His coming, death and resurrection. Jesus hid His identity from them as they walked and only revealed Himself at the breaking of the bread after they urged Him to join them for a meal in Emmaus! How their hearts were burning as He opened the scriptures to them. Heck, the written word in front of our eyes we don’t understand completely! It’s right there, written down and we mere humans struggle to understand the great God that sacrificed Himself for us! We know so little yet we believe so much! “Blessed are those that believe but have not seen.”

Pete Bauer said...

Amen, brother!