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Description

This meditation offers a profound perspective on understanding the trials and problems inherent in life. Bishop Fulton Sheen explains that suffering is not a meaningless affliction but a continuation of Christ's passion in the world today. Listeners are invited to discover a new dimension to their own struggles, seeing them not as isolating incidents but as a potential participation in the redemptive work of Christ for the sake of His body, the Church. This understanding can transform one's approach to hardship, offering purpose and even joy in the midst of pain.

Bishop Sheen begins by challenging the common perception of Christ's suffering as a historical event confined to the past. He introduces the idea that "Christ is on the cross until the end of the world," meaning the passion is an ongoing reality. He substantiates this by referencing St. Paul's letter to the Colossians, where Paul speaks of filling up in his own flesh what is lacking in Christ's afflictions. Sheen clarifies that while Christ's suffering as the head of the Church was complete and perfect, the suffering of His body, the Church, continues. Therefore, the trials faced by believers are not pointless but are opportunities to share in and complete the passion of Christ for the salvation of others.

The sermon further explores how this continuation of Christ's passion manifests both consciously and unconsciously. For those with faith, suffering can be a conscious act of participation, a way to unite their pain with Christ's for the good of the Church, a concept Sheen calls "transferability." He illustrates this with the powerful story of Elisabeth Leseur, whose years of offered suffering led to the conversion of her atheist husband. For those without explicit faith, their poverty, sickness, and oppression are an unconscious carrying of the cross. Sheen argues that in their suffering, they too are Christ, and this realization should fundamentally change how Christians view and interact with the afflicted, seeing them not as mere objects of pity but as visible extensions of the suffering Christ in the world.