Good Friday seems an appropriate time to meditate on “redemptive suffering,” something the Catholic Church, perhaps uniquely within the Christian tradition or religion in general, emphasizes.
“Redemptive suffering” is about the ways human suffering can take on spiritual meaning and value, and I have to admit I’ve struggled to understand this for 30 years.
It isn’t that pain is a “good” thing. Christians are called to alleviate it when they can. But I’ve often wondered what the heck people mean when they say “offer it up to God.”
A long story made short, it means suffering has meaning and purpose.
Human suffering (unavoidable) can be “offered up” and united with the suffering of Jesus to create spiritual value, for oneself (your suffering is not “meaningless”) or for others (your prayer intentions for others).
“Suffering with” Jesus does not mean you alter what already has been done (“salvation or redemption”) but on the other hand unites you that act.
The way I characterize this is that as cultivating a garden; raising a child; building some useful object; painting; singing or other creative acts are in some sense a participation in genesis (“creation”), so suffering might be viewed (when offered intentionally) as part of the redemption of the universe.
When someone suffers illness or loss, and intentionally “offers it up,” it becomes a prayer.
People can respond to suffering in different ways, and doing something with it imparts meaning:
resentment
despair
acceptance
as an offering.
Salvifici Doloris seems to be the most insightful treatment I've found. The idea is that suffering can have meaning and value for you and others, just as any other act of service. Our own suffering, when united purposefully with the suffering that was part of Jesus’ salvific act, is transformed, and helps others.
So suffering is not “meaningless.”
Catholic teaching is that this happens because of the communion of saints.
The communion of saints is the spiritual union (in reality, not theoretical) of all Christians, living or dead. We can pray for each other, ask for help and help others, as though all were fully present in the present moment.
When a person unites their sufferings with Christ's Passion, those sufferings can benefit other souls, spiritually, morally, and redemptively.
Done that way, suffering has a “creative character”: it produces good. help apply and extend that redemption in time and space to others.
What I think I learned this year (after 30 of not comprehending) is that the model is suffering endured by Jesus to redeem the universe. That sacrifice transformed suffering into redemption.
And that is the pattern. Our own personal suffering can be transformed into redemptive reality for others.
Catholic teaching is that redemptive suffering works in many ways:
Leading to the conversion of others
“Speeding” saints entry into heaven
For some intention (a good for another person)
To further sanctify the world
unleashes unselfish love on behalf of those who suffer.
This has nothing to do with what Christ already accomplished (redemption of the world). It has everything to do with how we can wring benefits for other humans out of our own pain.
So my new understanding, as limited as it might be, is that in Catholic theology, redemptive suffering is quite similar to other Christian practices of charity and mercy. We do things to help others.
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