From Vatican Information Service:
Vatican City, 15 February 2012 (VIS) - For the second consecutive week
the Holy Father focused his catechesis during his general audience on
Jesus' prayer before dying, basing his remarks on three phrases Christ
pronounced from the cross, as narrated in the Gospel of St. Luke. The
audience was held in the Paul VI Hall in the presence of some 6,000
pilgrims from all over the world.
Jesus' first phrase: "Father,
forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing", was pronounced
as soon as He had been crucified and while the soldiers were dividing
His garments. "This first prayer to the Father", the Pope explained,
"was a request to forgive His executioners". At the same time, however,
"it is an interpretation of what is happening. The men who crucified Him
'do not know what they are doing'. In other words, Christ presents
ignorance, 'not knowing', as a reason for requesting forgiveness of the
Father, because that ignorance opens the way to conversion".
The
second phrase: "Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in
Paradise", addressed to the "good thief" crucified at Christ's side, is
"a word of hope", the Holy Father said. Jesus thereby reaffirmed "that
God's goodness can touch us even in the final instant of existence, and
that sincere prayer, even after a misspent life, encounters the open
arms of the good Father Who awaits the return of His child".
"Father,
into your hands I commend my spirit", the last words Christ pronounced,
are "a prayer of 'entrustment', full of faith in God's love. Jesus'
prayer before dying is as dramatic as its is for all men and women but,
at the same time, it is pervaded by that profound calm which arises from
faith in the Father and the desire to entrust oneself to Him
completely".
"When life was about to leave Him, He sealed His
final decision in a prayer. Jesus allowed Himself to be consigned 'into
human hands', but it was into the hands of the Father that He placed His
spirit. Thus, as John the Evangelist says, all things were
accomplished, the supreme act of love was carried to the end".
"Jesus'
words on the cross in the final instants of His earthly existence
provide binding guidelines for our own prayer, but they also open the
way to serene trust and firm hope. By asking the Father to forgive those
who are crucifying Him, Jesus invites us to make the difficult gesture
of praying for the people who do us wrong, ... that the light of God may
illuminate their hearts. In other words, He invites us to adopt, in our
prayer, the same attitude of mercy and love which God shows towards
us", the Pope said.
"At the same time Jesus, at the extreme
moment of death, entrusted Himself entirely into the hands of God the
Father, communicating to us the certainty that, however difficult our
trials ... or burdensome our suffering, we will never fall out of God’s
hands, the hands which created us, and which support and accompany us on
life’s journey".