
How do we make it holy, this special time of the Church year we call Holy Week? We continue with our daily activities. We listen to the news, read books, cook meals and clean our houses. Everything is painfully normal in this Holy Week. What might be the pause in our lives that prompts us to remember the passion of Christ, the betrayal, the arrest, the crucifixion?
How do we remember in an intentional way, so that when the holiest day of the year brings resurrection, we can experience resurrection too?
I know that remembering requires effort. It requires our undivided attention and our most reverent worship. But it’s worth our effort and our devotion, because at the end of the woundedness, there is resurrected life!
I plan to try to walk with Jesus through this week in my mind and in my spirit. For me, music leads me on this path. I recall the hymn “O Sacred Head, Now Wounded” translated by Paul Gerhardt from the medieval Latin poem, Salve mundi salutare. The hymn has eleven stanzas addressing the various parts of Christ’s body hanging on the Cross.
I am going to commit a blogger’s faux pas regarding length and print all eleven stanzas here. I invite you to consider the words of this hymn as a devotional path through Holy Week:
O sacred Head, now wounded, with grief and shame weighed down,
Now scornfully surrounded with thorns, Thine only crown;
How pale Thou art with anguish, with sore abuse and scorn!
How does that visage languish, which once was bright as morn!
What Thou, my Lord, hast suffered, was all for sinners’ gain;
Mine, mine was the transgression, but Thine the deadly pain.
Lo, here I fall, my Savior! ’Tis I deserve Thy place;
Look on me with Thy favor, vouchsafe to me Thy grace.
Men mock and taunt and jeer Thee, Thou noble countenance,
Though mighty worlds shall fear Thee and flee before Thy glance.
How art thou pale with anguish, with sore abuse and scorn!
How doth Thy visage languish that once was bright as morn!
Now from Thy cheeks has vanished their color once so fair;
From Thy red lips is banished the splendor that was there.
Grim death, with cruel rigor, hath robbed Thee of Thy life;
Thus Thou hast lost Thy vigor, Thy strength in this sad strife.
My burden in Thy Passion, Lord, Thou hast borne for me,
For it was my transgression which brought this woe on Thee.
I cast me down before Thee, wrath were my rightful lot;
Have mercy, I implore Thee; Redeemer, spurn me not!
What language shall I borrow to thank Thee, dearest friend,
For this Thy dying sorrow, Thy pity without end?
O make me Thine forever, and should I fainting be,
Lord, let me never, never outlive my love to Thee.
My Shepherd, now receive me; my Guardian, own me Thine.
Great blessings Thou didst give me, O source of gifts divine.
Thy lips have often fed me with words of truth and love;
Thy Spirit oft hath led me to heavenly joys above.
Here I will stand beside Thee, from Thee I will not part;
O Savior, do not chide me! When breaks Thy loving heart,
When soul and body languish in death’s cold, cruel grasp,
Then, in Thy deepest anguish, Thee in mine arms I’ll clasp.
The joy can never be spoken, above all joys beside,
When in Thy body broken I thus with safety hide.
O Lord of Life, desiring Thy glory now to see,
Beside Thy cross expiring, I’d breathe my soul to Thee.
My Savior, be Thou near me when death is at my door;
Then let Thy presence cheer me, forsake me nevermore!
When soul and body languish, oh, leave me not alone,
But take away mine anguish by virtue of Thine own!
Be Thou my consolation, my shield when I must die;
Remind me of Thy passion when my last hour draws nigh.
Mine eyes shall then behold Thee, upon Thy cross shall dwell,
My heart by faith enfolds Thee. Who dieth thus dies well.
So glad you committed the faux pas! Lovely, gripping, sacred. Thank you.
LikeLike
Thanks for the encouraging words. I debated it, but decided that it was worth printing. So powerful.
Kathy
LikeLike