I still remember the first time I saw Holy Week referred to as Passion Week! I was a new Christian and associated ‘passion’ with strong emotion or intense loving feelings. I could not see how the crucifixion and resurrection could be called Passion Week.
I did some research and found that the word “passion” comes from the Greek verb pascho, and meaning “to suffer,” particularly in reference to Christ’s sufferings and death on the cross. What a difference between the secular connotation of passion and the meaning behind the week’s title!
Suffering is not a popular topic in today’s culture and rarely does one hear a sermon that addresses the biblical perspective on it. When people are faced with suffering, whether it is physical, emotional, or spiritual, we tend to look for the nearest pill, band-aid, or product to numb the pain and make the suffering go away.
Sadly, much of the suffering that people in our pews are dealing with cannot be relieved simply with pills or products. Guilt, grief, shame, sin, sexual brokenness, dysfunctional families, and addictions do not go away easily. When people are facing pain, trials, death, and betrayal, they need encouragement and hope.
This is where the passion of Christ as shared in our reading in Matthew, especially in Chapter 26: 36-46, can provide consolation and comfort. While the suffering on the cross is also a critical example that we can point people to, most of us won’t face the level of suffering experienced in the crucifixion. But when Jesus is in the Garden, His actions reflect His human side, the side to which we can relate!
He is aware of what is ahead for Him, (pain and separation from the Father) and He petitions the Father three times to let the cup pass from Him. He is asking God to find another way for redemption to be made possible. Instead of God answering Jesus’ prayer, He lets Him suffer for our sake. God did that because He knew what was on the other side of the suffering, the resurrection.
In other words, we cannot prevent people from suffering but we are called to let them see that God has a plan, a purpose for it. And He will be with them in it, just as he was with Jesus. And that is real passion.