Lent #36: Good Friday.
There
they crucified Him.
(John 19:18)
“Fix your eyes on Jesus …who endured the cross with its
shame” (Hb 12:2). After this day, we can never ponder Christ
apart from “the cross with its shame.” The cross, as depicted in the film “The
Passion”, was indeed the cruelest instrument of execution the world has ever devised.
There is the brutal torture of it; but, on top of that, as the book of Hebrews
points out, there is the shame of it. Crucifixion was a public event with the
victim hanging up there naked, bludgeoned and helpless for all to see. It’s the
cruel instrument of pax romana—Roman
Peace.
The greatest mystery in all history is how this same cross
has become the symbol of a completely different peace: “My peace I give you,
not as the world gives” (Jn 14:27). It is
a peace that does not come from the powers of the executioners; but, by
surprise, from The Victim—the One Crucified. This is “the gospel of peace--the
peace of God, which transcends all understanding” (Eph
6:5 & Phil 4:7). Or, again and again, as the Apostle says elsewhere,
“God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself.” It is a God event. On the
cross God is having dealings with us and with the whole of creation.
That’s what turns this violent, shame filled and tragic
Friday, into Good Friday. So good, that the cross has been changed into
something one might wear around their neck; or, placed high for all to see
where people gather to worship. It’s on this cross, at this place and at this
Hour, that Christ became “the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for
ours but also for the sins of the whole world” (1Jn
2:2). Easter morning makes it so.
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