JR:
God the Father has more in common with the emotionless Spock than with Jesus!
Good grief! I hope not.
You can’t compartmentalize God this way. The God-head is one. The three persons in the God-head are consubstantial. The Logos, who is the Son, becomes human, but does not cease to be divine, nor do the two natures blend. They co-exist in one person, like the Oreo.
In his divinity Jesus remains God and there is no difference between his love and the love of the Father or his ability to forgive and that of the Father. It is the act of forgiving the person who does not deserve forgiveness that is compassionate. Compassion is not an emotion. It is an act of great charity. In this case, you are giving to another more than he or she deserves. There are two words that express what happens when God or we truly forgive: compassion and mercy.
Compassion comes from the Latin “to feel with” and mercy comes from the Latin “misericordia” or “open your heart”. Neither of these are emotions. They are choices.
In human beings, these choices can be prompted by emotions, but there are times when the emotions tell us to do just the opposite. We are so angry that we don’t want to “feel with” the other person or to “open our hearts” to the other person. In those situations, we have to do as Christ did. We have to place our goal over our emotions. The goal is always the perfection of charity.
should we not make every effort to suppress feelings of compassion in us and love with a compassionless love like God? After all, Saint Paul the Apostle tells us:
If Paul is speaking of imitating God in the way God loves, then doesn’t that mean we should love without emotion and without compassion? Any compassionate love would be unlike God’s love, and so ungodly. Would it not?
I don’t think that I have to go back to compassion. I explained that above. Are we called to suppress our emotions to be like God? NO. That is not what Paul is saying at all. You have to take that verse in the context of the entire letter to Ephesus. They were having many internal conflicts. Paul reminds them to love as God loves. But notice that he tells them to love s Christ loved us. You cannot imitate the Father unless you look a the Son.
St. Francis of Assisi taught his sons and daughters that the Holy Spirit leads us to Christ. When we look at Christ and imitate Christ, we become intimately connected to him, so that as Christ moves toward the Father, he takes us along. The goal is to reach the Father. But we can only reach the Father by loving as Christ loved. Because we have no idea how much the Father can love or even how he loves. The Father is beyond Cosmic. Christ, because he’s human, is comprehensible to us. The Holy Spirit makes it possible for us to love and forgive as Christ loved and forgave. When we do this, St. Francis tells us that we are united to him. If we are united to him, St. John tells us, “He who abides in love abides in God.” If we love and forgive as Jesus does, we are on our way to the Father.
We do not suppress our emotions. St. Francis teaches us that our emotions are part of our poverty. If we deny our emotions then we deny our humanity. To deny our humanity is to reject our poverty. Unless a man leaves everything, he cannot be my disciple.
In order to leave something, you have to acknowledge that it exists.
I have to acknowledge that my emotions exist. Then, I have to put aside those that get in the way of loving as Christ loved. That is why we have been given the Holy Spirit. He will show us what emotions we have to overcome and how to do it. He cannot show us, if we suppress them. To suppress is to deny their existence. If we don’t have the, then we don’t need the Holy Spirit either. If we don’t need the Holy Spirit, then we must be gods, not poor men and women. Our emotions keep us poor, thus keeping us dependent on the Holy Spirit in order to understand them, to use them wisely and to ignore them when necessary.
I’ll say it again–fascinating!
Are you saying that, at that moment, Jesus resisted the temptation to feel either hate or compassion, but loved them the way the Father loved them–without emotion of any kind? Are you saying there was no compassion in His Passion?
He resisted the temptation to feel hate, not compassion. Remember his conversation with the repentant thief. The thief says two simple words, “Remember me” And Jesus looks toward him and canonizes him in life. “Today you shall be with me in Paradise”. That’s compassion.
Look at Mary. She is silent during the whole crucifixion. She is the perfect model of compassion. She too must have struggled with the temptation to hate, to lash out, and to do what any mother would do under these circumstances.
Because of her Immaculate Conception, Mary can be tempted, but cannot fall into temptation. Through the grace of God, she has what it takes to rise above the temptation. She is the best example that we can use for a human being who loves and forgives as God loves and forgives. She makes use of the grace that God gives her.
It is very fascinating. That’s why I chose to major in Mystical Theology for my doctorate. I find the life of the soul to be the most fascinating and the most practical branch of theology. The other branches of theology are important, because they give us doctrine, morals, biblical exegesis, etc. But Ascetical and Mystical Theology is the branch that tells us how to use it in daily life, how and why it works.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
