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Lily_Bernans
Guest
No, no, no, no, no! I was not making light of his suffering at all! I apologize for the confusion.I can assure you that any sane man even if he knows will be resurrected would not wish to go through the pain, agony, humiliation of crucifixion. Branded a common criminal, spat upon, mocked, whipped, nailed and suspended till you die of suffocation. And 3? hours to die. You seem to make light of his suffering just because he knows he will be resurrected. With scars to show for it.
theguardian.com/science/2004/apr/08/thisweekssciencequestions
Someone nailed to a crucifix with their arms stretched out on either side could expect to live for no more than 24 hours. Seven-inch nails would be driven through the wrists so that the bones there could support the body’s weight. The nail would sever the median nerve, which not only caused immense pain but would have paralysed the victim’s hands.
The feet were nailed to the upright part of the crucifix, so that the knees were bent at around 45 degrees. To speed death, executioners would often break the legs of their victims to give no chance of using their thigh muscles as support. It was probably unnecessary, as their strength would not have lasted more than a few minutes even if they were unharmed.
Once the legs gave out, the weight would be transferred to the arms, gradually dragging the shoulders from their sockets. The elbows and wrists would follow a few minutes later; by now, the arms would be six or seven inches longer. The victim would have no choice but to bear his weight on his chest. He would immediately have trouble breathing as the weight caused the rib cage to lift up and force him into an almost perpetual state of inhalation.
Suffocation would usually follow, but the relief of death could also arrive in other ways. “The resultant lack of oxygen in the blood would cause damage to tissues and blood vessels, allowing fluid to diffuse out of the blood into tissues, including the lungs and the sac around the heart,” says Ward.
This would make the lungs stiffer and make breathing even more difficult, and the pressure around the heart would impair its pumping.
The agony is worse for him because he knew he will die by crucifixion even before the trial, the most painful death of the time. Knowing you will get up 3 days later doesn’t give a lot of comfort. Ordinary men would be clueless and still hoping to get acquitted and an “ignorance is bliss” statement may be apt for them.
Yes, you are, once again, entirely correct.
Just reading your post made me uncomfortable. I do try to read The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ every Lenten season, but I have read that the translator embellished Bl. Anne Catherine’s Emmerich’s words. Still, I feel the book is valuable. Some people take offense a the movie “The Passion of the Christ,” but I find it valuable for bonding oneself to Jesus’ sufferings, especially during Lent even though there are parts of the movie I wish Gibson would have done differently.
Thank you for clearing up my confusing posts of yesterday.