H.E. Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Reflection on Isaiah’s Prophecies and our Lord’s Passion

H.E. Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Reflection on Isaiah’s Prophecies and our Lord’s Passion

H.E. Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden’s Reflection on Isaiah’s Prophecies and our Lord’s Passion

As we gather on this solemn and sacred evening of Holy Thursday, we stand at the threshold of the Passion of our Lord. Tonight, the Church invites us not only to remember the Last Supper, but also to enter spiritually into the mystery of Christ’s suffering, foretold centuries before it came to pass.

Among the voices of the prophets, none speaks with such profound clarity about the Passion as the Prophet Isaiah. His words, written long before the coming of Christ, illuminate the path that leads to the Cross.

The prophet declares: “He was despised and rejected by people; a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.” In these words, we recognize Christ, abandoned, misunderstood, and betrayed.

On this very night, He is handed over, denied, and left alone. The suffering Servant of Isaiah is no distant figure; He is Jesus, who willingly enters into human pain. Isaiah continues: “Surely He has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows.”

The Passion is not merely an episode of suffering; it is an act of love. Christ does not suffer for Himself, but for us; for our sins, our burdens, our brokenness. Every lash, every insult, every moment of agony is borne for the salvation of the world.

The prophet speaks even more vividly: “He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and by His stripes we are healed.”

Here, we see the Cross not as defeat, but as victory. Through suffering comes healing; through sacrifice comes redemption.

Isaiah also foretells the silent endurance of Christ: “Like a lamb led to the slaughter, and like a sheep before its shearers is silent, so He opened His mouth not.”

In the trials that follow this night, Jesus does not resist. He does not defend Himself. His silence is not weakness, but divine obedience; a surrender to the will of the Father.

And finally, the prophet reveals the depth of this mystery: “He poured out His soul unto death… and bore the sin of many.”

The Passion is the ultimate offering. Christ gives Himself completely, holding nothing back, so that humanity might be reconciled with God.

As we contemplate these prophetic words, we realize that the Cross was not an accident of history, but part of God’s eternal plan of salvation.

What Isaiah saw in shadow, we now behold in fullness.

Tonight, let us approach this mystery with reverence and gratitude. Let us reflect on the love that led Christ to the Cross, and let us ask ourselves: how do we respond to such love?

May we learn to carry our own crosses with faith.

May we embrace humility, patience, and forgiveness.

And may we never forget that through His suffering, we are given life eternal.


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