Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Good Friday Reflections 2019

7 Words From the Cross

Word #1 Luke 23:33-35
Reflection:
Our first word, sometimes called the word of forgiveness. AS Jesus is hung on the cross, as he is being mocked and the soldiers divide up his few possessions as they would the spoils of war, he offers a word (a prayer?) of forgiveness for those who have abused and murdered him. “Father forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing”.
But they do know what they are doing, don’t they? Depends how you look at it. Because we sometimes think we know what we are doing when something else is happening too. The leaders and the soldiers know that they are trying to keep the Roman Peace by disposing of a troublemaker. Jesus suggests that unknowingly they are doing something else. For centuries that thing they are being forgiven for, because they don’t know they are doing it, is the murder of the Messiah, the execution of the Son of God.
Forgiveness is a big part of how we are brought back to be at-one with God and with each other. Sometimes that forgiveness is when we know what we did. Sometimes it is when we don’t know how we screwed up. At the time of his death Jesus continues to remind us of the power of forgiveness. He continues to model what it means to forgive when it is not easy. When do we need to hear the words “forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” and know that we are a part of ‘them’? When do we help put people on crosses, when do we mock those who have been offered up?
Prayer:
God of grace and mercy. Today we remember that we all fall short of who we could be. Today we remember that we all need to forgive and to be forgiven. Open our hearts to your grace. Open our hearts to your mercy. Help us admit our failings, help us hear when we didn’t know what we were doing. We pray in the name of Jesus, who shows us that we are forgiven. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #2 Luke 23:39-43
Reflection:
A 2nd word, one of salvation. Following close on the word of forgiveness comes the promise of paradise. Crucified beside Jesus are two “criminals”, maybe common thieves but likely brigands or rebels. One of them joins with the crowd, the other has mercy in his heart. Maybe this speaks to why they got themselves where they are? Was the first in it for himself while the 2nd had loftier ideals?
At any rate the honesty of repentance, of naming the truth seems to be a part of salvation. Can we only truly embrace the Kingdom of God when we are willing to acknowledge who and where we are? Only then can we open ourselves to the grace and mercy of God, only then can we, as they say, throw ourselves on the mercy of the court.
The Kingdom of God is among us, Jesus said. The Kingdom of God is open to us. But we have to open ourselves first.
Prayer:
Jesus, remember me, when you come into your kingdom. We echo the ancient words. We throw ourselves on God’s mercy as we open our hearts to the reality of God’s Reign. Or we want to at least. God help us to be that vulnerable and honest. In a world where we are told that anything goes to get what we want, help us know when that is wrong. Help us be able to accept our consequences. And then help us know that we are welcome in the Kingdom after all. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #3 John 19:25-27
Reflection:
What is life without relationship? Our relationships are, hopefully, the places where we find support and comfort. We all need people who will care for us, we all need family. Sometimes family is by birth, sometimes it is by choice. In this 3rd word, sometimes called the word of relationship, we are reminded of the importance of family.
This word also reminds us to always watch out for those we love. I suspect many of us would become a little bit self-absorbed were we hanging on that cross. But Jesus sees people in pain, people in need of love and acts on it. Maybe Jesus’ mother and the Beloved Disciple would have made that connection on their own. Maybe not. Jesus leaves nothing up to chance.
When do we need someone to step in as adoptive family and ease our pain? When do we need to adopt someone? Jesus calls us to care for and love each other. Whose pain can we share in our world today? Where can we build relationship?
Prayer:
God who loves us as a parent, we give thanks for the loving healthy relationships in our lives. Help us know when we need to open our hearts and welcome another in. Help us know when we need to allow ourselves to be welcomed in. God who calls us to live in relationship, may we be ready ad willing to share the joy and sorrow, the triumph and defeat of life with the people around us. Help us God to treat as family, everyone whose lie we share. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #4 Mark 15:33-35
Reflection:
Have you ever felt totally alone? It is not a pleasant feeling. And in the end it doesn’t really matter if you are really as alone as you feel, being told that you are not alone may do nothing to change the feeling. Sometimes emotion trumps logic.
Over the centuries people have struggled with this word of abandonment. Surely Jesus could not have really felt abandoned by God, even at this hour of despair! Surely Jesus always knew himself help in God’s love! Surely Jesus, being God, could not possibly be abandoned by God!
At the same time Christian theology has always held that Jesus is fully divine AND fully human (even if Christian theology has never been able to make that statement make logical sense). To be human is to know those times when you feel alone. Jesus has seen most of his friends run away, as he had predicted. Jesus has been tried and convicted. Jesus is dying an agonizing death Feeling abandoned by everyone, even God, makes sense to me.
We are not alone, we live in God’s world...in life in death, in life beyond death God is with us. We are not alone” Our United Church Creed reminds us of a great truth. But there are still times when God’s people feel abandoned. Looking at the world there are lots of times when it makes more sense that God has gone away, than to say God is still there and yet all this horror still exists. WE can tell our selves that all of creation is in God ad that God is always with us but have trouble seeing the evidence this is true. And emotion can trump logic, heart can trump brain. Do we have the courage to name the depth of feeling that comes with being abandoned?
Prayer:
God in whom we live and move and have our being, there are days. Days when we feel alone, lost, left behind. On those days move in our souls, stir the fire of hope in our bellies, remind us of the great truth—that we are never alone. Even when the world does terrible things, even when we can not hear your voice, we trust that you would never truly abandon us. It just feels that way, and we need you to know it. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #5 John 19:28-29
Reflection:
Words 4 and 5 have moved us into the agony of the cross. First that word of emotional distress. Now this word of physical distress. John tells us that Jesus says this to fulfil Scripture. I tend to think that after a few hours in the Palestinian sun Jesus likely was thirsty (part of that fully human thing).
On a metaphorical level I think Jesus has been thirsty for a long time. Furthermore I think Jesus wants us to be thirsty too. Thirsty for the wine of justice, thirsty for the water of righteousness. Sadly I think that too often we settle for sour wine. Too often we think sour wine is all we have to give.
Every year I spend some of my time around Good Friday considering the crosses in our world. Whenever we accept those crosses as “the way things need to be” I think we settle for sour wine, a fluid that does not really satisfy at all. Maybe we should demand the good wine, the fresh water that heals and satisfies, maybe we should look to see what we have to offer to those who hunger and thirst for justice, peace, righteousness – for the Kingdom. In John Jesus begins his ministry in the town of Cana at a wedding where the wine has run out. At that point his mother pushes him to do something about it and solve the thirst problem. Now it is Jesus who is thirsty. What will we do? What will we offer?
Prayer:
God who first moved over the waters of creation called forth life, we thirst for the water of life. We pray both that you will slake our thirst and, at the same time keep us thirsting for the good wine, for the fresh water. In a world where “good enough” is often seen as the standard push us to work for the better. In a world where so many hunger and thirst push us to work to see them fed in body and in soul, as we live into the Kingdom of abundant love. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #6 John 19:30-34
Reflection:
Counter-intuitively this penultimate word is called a word of Triumph. Triumph, as Jesus says it is finished and gives up his spirit. Does that make sense? Then again this day of a dark ad terrible story is called Good Friday, which also seems a bit counter-intuitive.
Where is the triumphant note in the last breath of Jesus? Some suggest that a better translation is in fact “it is competed” or “it is accomplished”. Do those other verbs say something different? They are all verbs of ending, but the latter two may lead us to that note of triumph.
Finished” could just mean an end, but ‘completed’ or ‘accomplished’ suggest work that has been done. There is a strong theological tradition that the work which is completed is the sacrificial death for the forgiveness of sins. This is certainly a possible reading of Scripture. I also think a reading is that the work of Jesus’ life is now finished/completed/accomplished. Jesus has done what ho could to proclaim and bring on the Kingdom of God. The next steps are not his. They may be God’s, they may be those Jesus taught and led, but he has done his part.
Still the only triumph I find in this part of the story, especially if I put myself in the context of not knowing the “rest of the story”, is the triumph of the powers and principalities. The powers that actively work against the Reign of God have won. They have stopped the revolution. “It is Finished” could also be “well we tried, but now we’re toast...”. I wonder what those standing on that hillside understood it to mean?
Prayer:
God of beginnings and endings, what is finished today? You call us to resist the powers and principalities but so often they seem stronger, better organized, better supported. So often they draw us in and we give in to the easier path they offer. What is accomplished on this day? As we move forward as people of faith help us to see the possibility of victory and not give in to defeat. Help us play our part in the growing of the Kingdom that Jesus proclaimed. Amen.
A Candle is Extinguished

Word #7 Luke 23:44-46
Reflection:
Our final word. Luke’s version of the dying words of Christ. Tradition seems to view it as the counter to word 4. The abandonment expressed in Eloi Eloi Lama Sabacthani is now reversed as Jesus dies with words of trust that God is present “”into your hands I commend my spirit”. If Jesus was abandoned by God they are now reunited.
Is it a sign of hope?
Is it a sign of surrender?
Is it a sign of trust?
Is it all 3?
On this Good Friday we have listened as Jesus dies on the cross. We have heard his words as shared by the Gospel writers. Now we come to the end. Just as Jesus was confident in the loving presence of God throughout the story to this point he dies in that same confidence. I see hope and trust there. Where God is present there is hope – even if it is really hard to see. As it stands now the sinfulness of the world seems to have won. All those things that work against God’s Reign are powerful. That is as true today as it was in the 1st century. It is dangerous to upset the system, to challenge the “way things are”. But sometimes tat is were God leads us. May we have the confidence and trust of Jesus when we challenge the powers, when we are consumed with passion for the kingdom. God is in that activity.
Prayer:
God of the cross, God present at the end, God who awakes passion in us, we come to the end of today’s story. It brings us sorrow. It makes us wonder what it was all worth. But still you are here. Still you are here. Keep us filled with passion for the Kingdom when the way is hard. Keep us looking toward Jesus when our confidence fails. Give us the courage to risk a cross of our own, and we we have given it our all may we still have trust in you ad your Reign. We pray in the name of the one who hangs on the cross. Jesus of Nazareth. Amen

THE CHRIST CANDLE IS PUT OUT

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