“Jesus I trust in you”
What is Divine Mercy? Divine Mercy is the term used that describes the love of God beyond anything that humankind deserves. Mercy is divine charity toward those who have sinned. Despite the fact that we are sinners, God continues to call us to be forgiven, gives us even more love, removes the punishment due to our sins, and blesses us beyond what we might have received from Him had we not sinned. [1] “Divine Mercy! This is the Easter gift that the Church receives from the risen Christ and offers to humanity at the dawn of the third millennium….” [2] This mercy of forgiveness is our beginning as Saint Augustine says, “a sacrament of new life which begins here and now with the forgiveness of all past sins.” [3] God wills to not only forgive our sins, but to give us a new life. What great love, that He not only removes the bad but fills us with good!
What is Divine Mercy Sunday? Divine Mercy was first revealed to a Polish sister who is now a saint named Saint Faustina. When she was 18, Saint Faustina began receiving visions of Jesus appearing to her. He directed her to enter a convent where he continued to appear to her and speak to her. She was asked by Jesus to promote His Divine Mercy, and establish the Sunday after Easter as Divine Mercy Sunday. He spoke these words to Saint Faustina, “I am King of Mercy. I desire that this image (the Divine Mercy image) be displayed in public on the first Sunday after Easter. That Sunday is the Feast of Mercy. Through the Word Incarnate, I make known the bottomless depth of My mercy.” [4]
In 2000, Saint John Paul II celebrated her canonization on May 1st, the Sunday after Easter Sunday. There he proclaimed that, “from now on throughout the Church this Sunday will be called “Divine Mercy Sunday.”
Who is Saint Faustina? St. Faustina was a Polish woman who became a nun at the age of twenty. She joined the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy. Their mission was to care for and educate troubled young women. In the 1930’s, she began receiving our Lord’s message of mercy and was asked by Jesus to spread this message to the whole world. She died in 1938 of tuberculosis. Soon after her death, her sisters discovered that Saint Faustina had kept a diary while in the convent. This book, now an international bestseller, can be found in any Catholic Bookstore. During her visions, Jesus ordered her to have an image painted of him with the words “Jesus I trust in you.” at the bottom.[5] She did as Jesus commanded and the Image is now an intimate part of Divine Mercy Sunday.
What is the Divine Mercy Image? The image of Divine Mercy that was revealed to St. Faustina by Jesus shows the resurrected Jesus in a white garment with two rays coming from his heart; one is red and the other white. The red and white represent his blood and water that poured out when the soldier pierced His side. The blood recalls the sacrifice of Golgotha and the mystery of the Eucharist while the white represents the water of our Baptism and the wonderful gift of the Holy Spirit. Despite the work of the artist, Saint Faustina was very sad about the way the painting had turned out. She wept to the Lord and cried, “Who will paint You as beautiful as You are?” Jesus responded, “Not in the beauty of the color, nor of the brush lies the greatness of this image, but in My grace.” [6]
[1] Modern Catholic Dictionary pg. 165
[2] homily on Mercy Sunday, 2001
[3] Spiritual Reading from this Link to Liturgy packet
[4] Diary 88
[5] Diary 47
[6] Diary 313
[7] http://www.divinemercysunday.com/pdf/UnderstandDM.pdf
[8] Diary 699
[9] http://www.divinemercysunday.com/how-to-celebrate.htm
[10] Diary 742