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* *
This
is the scene in the middle of the night: there is the triumph of the
capture mixed with the urgency of the business necessary to bring
everything to a satisfactory conclusion. So the local religious leaders
begin to make the circuit. First to Annas, the retired, honorary high
priest; then to Caiaphas, the current high priest; and finally to
Pilate, the Roman prefect (or governor) in Judea. And it is this third
stop where arrest becomes public spectacle; where semi-interested
observers become an unruly crowd and where an uncertain judge renders
a final verdict.
Here
is theater of the first order. Those who were in the know and those
who were merely out and about in the middle of the night quickly figured
out that something interesting, fascinating, noteworthy was going
on, and they closed in to see what it was. Watching and walking from
place to place, exchanging observations and rumorsit became
a lively way to pass the night. And in the early hours of the morning,
it got even better. The man was brought out on Pilates balcony
dressed in royal purple with a bizarre crown on his head. At the prompting
of a few instigators, the growing crowd erupted with chants of Crucify
him! Crucify him! It was high drama, indeed.
What
comes next is captured in a Good Friday tradition that picks up the
drama with Pilates judgment. The fourteen Stations of the Cross
have become a way to depict the events that proceed through the rest
of the day. In some religious traditions, there is a pilgrimage from
station to station so that the faithful can follow the progress of
the drama and mentally reenact the story of that long-ago Friday.
Today, around the world, millions will make that journey, some moving
through the streets of their city and some moving just a few steps
from station to station (as is the case when viewing the exhibit by
artist Melanie Twelves out in the Loggia). This is the way the events
of the day are marked and remembered:
Jesus
is condemned to death.
Jesus carries his cross.
Jesus falls the first time.
Jesus meets his mother.
Simon of Cyrene helps Jesus carry his cross.
Veronica wipes the face of Jesus.
Jesus falls the second time.
Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem.
Jesus falls a third time.
Jesus is stripped of his garments.
Jesus is nailed to the cross.
Jesus is raised upon the cross and dies.
The body of Jesus is taken down from the cross.
Jesus is laid in the tomb.
On
that fateful Friday long ago, the curious walked and watched. For
generation upon generation since, the faithful have reviewed and reflected.
And throughout the centuries, artists of deep conviction and deep
suspicion have offered us an opportunity to see it all again through
their eyes. It comes at us in the intensity of an El Greco painting
with its gaunt-faced Christ and its palette of reds and blacks; in
a Hemingway short story dialogue among the soldiers on the crucifixion
detail; and in the rock music of Jesus Christ, Superstar.
Good
Fridaya day in history, a day recorded and reenacted and remembered
by generations and generations over the centuries to the point where
we can see clearly in our minds the events of that day. We can put
faces on the principal players; we can hear the various voices; we
can paint the backdrops and feel the tensions. When we sing Were
You There? we can use our imaginations to answer yes. Yes, even
if we cannot place ourselves in the midst of the play or the painting,
because we can be those who are able to look onthe beneficiaries
of storytellers and artists and Gospel writers who have etched Good
Friday into our minds and our senses.
If
Good Friday was simply a day in history, that would be enough. More
than enough really. To be able to pictureto be drawn into a
2000-year-old event is a rare privilege. But this is more than a day
in history, more than an event for spectators. What we are dealing
with todaywhat we are still trying to unravelis the power
of this Friday. What we want to get a handle on is the connection
between what happened on that long-ago and faraway hill called Golgotha
and the way our lives take shape. How does it matter? What does it
do to us? for us? in us?
Incarnation
is a word you hear. IncarnationGod come in the flesh; God with
skin and bones and shape and voice; God with human form, human struggles,
human touch. This one called Jesus, the arrested one being hustled
through the streets of the city, is God made visibleno, better
yet, is Gods love made visible.
What
we see today is not a picture of a man and a cross. What we see is
love like weve never seen it before, a costly but grace-filled
sacrifice offered for all humanity. In fact, to say we have seen it
is not exactly accurate. We have recognized it. We have felt it. We
have been enfolded by it. One minute we were looking at a potential
hero dying on a cross, spectators at a horrible spectacle. One minute
we were responding to the question, Were you there? with
a knowing nod of the head. Then abruptly the scene no longer mattered.
Artists paintings, the poetry of hymn writers, Hollywood movies,
and Sunday school dioramas mattered not at all. What mattered was
Gods love. Somehow in the midst of that Friday, in the midst
of this Friday, it is all about love. Love amazing in its depth and
its power. Love that takes the initiative, that pursues us, pursues
us, to use the words of Francis Thompson, like the Hound of Heaven.
No
longer is Good Friday a spectator event. We have been rousted from
our seats by the hound of heaven, pursued by a love that will not
let us go. We have been drawn into the action in a way that grabs
ahold of us and causes us to be abruptly awakened people, different
people than weve ever been before.
Seeing is only the beginning. Picturing the spectacleseeing
Jesus fall, and then fall again, and then be nailed to the cross and
dieas vivid as that may be, does not mean anything, does not
speak to our lives of quiet despair and pervasive fear, does not connect
to who we are. But the outpouring of divine love that fills this drama,
that speaks, that mattersthat is what changes the world, changes
our lives.
Clarissa
Pinkola Estes, who came to prominence with her book Women Who Run
with the Wolves, has a word that fits this day. She writes,
We have been training for a dark time such as this. . . . For many
decades, souls just like us have been felled and left for dead in
so many ways over and over, brought down by naïveté, by
lack of love, by being ambushed and assaulted by various cultural
and personal shocks in the extreme. We have a history of being gutted,
and yet remember this especially. . . . Over and over again we have
been the living proof that that which has been exiled, lost, or foundered
can be restored to life again. (Do Not Lose Heart, an
article distributed electronically)
We are restored to life by the persistence of Gods love.
Today
will change you, not because of what you have seen or pictured or
imagined, but because of what has planted itself within you. Love,
divine love, made visible as never before, pursuing us like the hound
of heaven. Grabbing hold of us in a way that cant be resisted.
Changing us in a way we could not have imagined. We are left gasping
for breath, overwhelmed by a love able to overcome our anxious minds
and fear-filled souls, able to overcome our sin and guilt and sorrow
and shame. Able to overcome our loneliness and separation. Able to
restore us to life.
In
that moment of recognition, that moment of awareness, you and I are
transformedand so is this day that is now called good.
Amen.