![]() EASTER SATURDAY "Joseph bought a linen cloth and took the body down from the cross. He had it wrapped in the cloth, and he put it in a tomb that had been cut into solid rock. Then he rolled a big stone against the entrance to the tomb." Mark 15:46 What do we see in this picture? Where are we? We are in the tomb with Jesus. The title of this image is "the Man of Sorrows", which refers to a famous passage in the prophet Isaiah: "He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering" (Isaiah 53:3). What does this face show us? We see suffering. This dead face is set in a frown. There are dark shadows under the eyes – the shadow under the left eye is like a bruise. The shoulders are hunched and tense, while the arms are limp and useless. Then we see an incredible vulnerability here. Jesus has the mouth of a sleeping child, with the lower lip sucked under the top lip, for comfort. The head is bent as if in sleep. We see the openness of Jesus to suffering and death. We see God made poor, weak and helpless. And yet the image does this without being sentimental. This face has no trace of self-pity, but instead is full of dignity and majesty. Even after the mockery of the trial, the agony of the scourging and the desperate struggle of the crucifixion, the face of Jesus is still the face of a king. Look at the powerful, arched eyebrows, which are stern without being severe. Look at the hair, which is so full of life – hair like the mane of a lion. This picture shows us the beauty of Christ in his complete obedience to the will of God, at vast cost to himself, and also in his unconditional love for us. Because it is for us, for our sake, that he is here like this. And this creates longing. The Orthodox liturgy for Holy Saturday has a prayer which is filled with this longing… "O faithful, come, let us behold our Life laid in a tomb to give life to those who dwell in tombs. Come, let us behold him in his sleep and cry out to him with the voice of the prophets: 'You are like a lion. Who shall arouse you, O King? Rise by your own power, O you who have given yourself up for us, O Lover of mankind.'" Click here for a few moments of thought and prayer. |
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