Prayer
is about the relationship between God and the person. The dialogue
betwenn the human being and God is called prayer. For St. Paul of the
Cross, when we pray, we dialogue with the Crucified God on the
Cross. This dialogue sets up a love-relationship between God and
the person. In Passion-Prayer the focus of this love-relationship is
always the Crucified God. This prayer describes time spent at the foot
of the cross. Prayer becomes loving attentiveness to the suffering
Jesus. The result is to be shaped in the image of the Crucified Christ.
In
the first stage the emphasis is on intellectual and imaginative
reflection on the events of Christ's Passion. The story of the Passion
is read and re-read and one's understanding is stirred by such questions
as: Who is it that suffers, Why does he suffer, for whom does He suffer?
Reflecting in this way the Passion has an inherent power to gradually
open the heart to love of Christ Crucified.
As
this love grows meditation fades into the background. The affections
begin to predominate.
Prayer becomes loving attentiveness to the suffering Lord. Love,
thankfulness, praise, sorrow, petition are the cries from the heart of
the one who stands at the foot of the Cross. This is the second phase of
the prayer relationship.
As
the affections, under God's action, give way to union the person is
plunged into Christ Crucified. Love for the wounded Christ, and sorrow
for his sufferings mingle and become one movement of the heart. The
person in loving sorrow and sorrowful love is immersed in the sea of
sorrow and ocean of love that is the Passion of Jesus. Love and sorrow
blend. It is all one in union with the One on the Cross. This is the
stage of contemplation.