Garden of Gethsemane
by Ronald Rolheiser
Several years ago, Mel Gibson produced and directed a movie
which enjoyed a spectacular popularity. Entitled, The Passion of the Christ,
the movie depicts Jesus' paschal journey from the Garden of Gethsemane to his
death on Golgotha, but with a very heavy emphasis on his physical
suffering. The movie shows
in graphic detail what someone who was being crucified might have had to endure
in terms of being physically beaten, tortured, and humiliated.
While most church groups applauded the film and suggested that,
finally, someone made a movie the truly depicted Jesus' suffering, many
scripture scholars and spiritual writers were critical of the movie. Why?
What's wrong with showing, at length and in graphic detail, the blood and gore
of the crucifixion - which, indeed, must have been pretty horrific?
What's wrong (or better, perhaps, amiss) is that this is
precisely what the Gospel accounts of Jesus' death don't do. All four Gospels
take pains to not focus on the physical sufferings of Jesus. Their descriptions
of his physical sufferings are stunningly brief: "They crucified him with
the two criminals." "Pilate had Jesus scourged and handed him over to
be crucified." Why the
brevity here? Why no detailed description?
The reason that the Evangelists don't focus us on what Jesus was
enduring physically is that they want us to focus something else, namely, on
what Jesus was enduring emotionally and morally. The passion of Jesus is, in
its real depth, a moral drama, not a physical one, the suffering of a lover,
not that of an athlete.
Thus we see that, when Jesus is anticipating his passion, the
anxiety he expresses is not about the whips that will beat him or the nails
that will pierce his hands. He is pained and anxious rather about the aloneness
he is facing, how he will be betrayed and abandoned by those who profess to
love him, and how he will, in the wonderful phraseology of Gil Bailie, be
"unanimity-minus-one".
That the passion of Jesus is a love-drama is also evident in its
setting. It begins with him sweating blood in a garden - and ends with him
being buried in a garden. Jesus is sweating blood in a garden, not in an arena.
What's significant about a garden?
In archetypal symbolism, gardens are not for growing vegetables
or even for growing flowers. Gardens are for lovers, the place to experience
delight, the place to drink wine, the place where Adam and Eve were naked and
didn't know it, the place where one makes love.
And so the Evangelists place the beginning and the end of Jesus'
passion in a garden to emphasize that it is Jesus, as lover (not Jesus as King,
or Magus, or Prophet) who is undergoing this drama. And what precisely was the
drama? When Jesus is
sweating blood in the Garden and begging his Father to spare him having to
"drink the cup", the real choice he is facing is not: Will I let
myself die or will I invoke divine power and save my life? Rather the choice
was: "How will die? Will I die angry, bitter, and unforgiving, or will I
die with a warm, forgiving heart?"
Of course, we know how Jesus resolved this drama, how he chose
forgiveness and died forgiving his executioners, and how, inside all that
darkness, he remained solidly inside the message that he had preached his whole
ministry, namely, that ultimately love, community, and
forgiveness triumph.
Moreover, what Jesus did in that great moral drama is something
we're supposed to imitate rather than simply admire because that drama is also
ultimately the drama of love within our own lives, presenting itself to us in
countless ways. Namely:
At the end of our lives, how will we die? Will our hearts be
angry, clinging, unforgiving, and bitter at the unfairness of life? Or, will
our hearts be forgiving, grateful, empathic, warm, as was the heart of Jesus
when he said to his Father not my will but yours be done?
Moreover this is not just one, major choice we face at the hour
of death; it is also a choice we face daily, many times daily. Countless times
in our daily interactions with others, our families, our colleagues, our
friends, and with society at large, we suffer moments of coldness,
misunderstanding, unfairness, and positive violation. From the indifference of
a family member to our enthusiasm, to a sarcastic comment that is intended to
hurt us, to a gross unfairness in our workplace, to being the victim of a
prejudice or abuse; our kitchen tables, our workplaces, our meeting rooms, and
the streets we share with others, are all places where we daily experience, in
small and big ways, what Jesus felt in the garden of Gethsemane,
unanimity-minus-one. In that darkness will we let go of our light? In the face
of hatred will we let go of love?
That's the real drama of the Passion of the Christ - and the
ropes, whips, and nails are not the central drama.
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