Compassion,
the Heart of Jesus in action
The word compassion comes from the
Latin, “cum-patire”, “to suffer, to experience with”. “To weep with those who
weep” : the first attitude is to communicate with the suffering of the person,
to share their state and to meet them where they are at.
Compassion
draws its grandeur from the love that produces it
We read in the bible :
“You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the first commandment. The second resembles it : You must love your neighbour as yourself.” (Mt. 22 : 36-39).
God himself gives a key to
compassion. Above all, to have the personal desire to love him every day with
our whole heart and our whole spirit. This is the indispensable condition for
advancing along the path of compassion.
At the same time, we need to
work at learning how to love ourselves, with and under the sight of God, to
accept ourselves as we are, in spite of all the wounds and imperfections of our
personality.
Saint Francis De Sales says
to us again : “gentleness towards yourself” and “gentleness towards others”.
Humility in action
Compassion obliges us to have
humility because it requires a lot of respect, gentleness, patience and
freedom.
Moreover one cannot live such love by
pretending or by watering down moral truth…(John Paul II “Veritatis Splendor”)
Only the Lord possesses
perfect compassion. We cannot exercise it ourselves.
It is necessary to ask Him to
accompany us, to inspire our words, our attitudes and the right tone, so that
we can look at our brother and sister through God’s eyes. We ought simply to be
his instruments and his messengers.
The
compassion of Christ
The compassion of Christ
towards the ill and his numerous healings of infirmities of every sort (see Mt.
4 : 24) are a brilliant sign of the fact “that God has visited his people” (Lk.
7 : 16) and that the Kingdom of Heaven is near. Jesus not only has power to
heal, but also to forgive sins (See Mt. 2 : 5-12) : he came to heal the whole
person body and soul ; he is the doctor whom the sick need (see Mk. 2 : 17).
His compassion towards all
those who suffer goes so far that he identifies himself with them.
“’For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you made me welcome, lacking clothes and you clothed me, sick and you visited me, in prison and you came to see me.’
Then the upright will say to him in reply, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you to drink ? When did we see you a stranger and make you welcome, lacking in clothes and clothe you ? When did we find you sick or in prison and go to see you ?’
And the King will answer, ‘In truth I tell you, in so far as you did this to one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did it to me.’”
(Mt. 25 : 35-40)
His preferential love for the
infirm has not ceased, through the centuries, to awaken in Christians a very
special attention towards all those who suffer in their body and in their soul.
It is at the origin of their untiring efforts to comfort them. (1998 Catechism
of the Catholic Church 1503)
Some places
You can find above a list,
which is not exhaustive, of places where it is possible to experience
compassion… But wherever you are… be sure that it is possible to experience
compassion !
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