This is the text of the sermon I preached at St. John's Episcopal Church in Centralia, Illinois on Good Friday this year. Curiously, scholars have all but proven that the crucifixion took place on April 3 in the year 33, so this year matches the dates of that year. I post this sermon by request.
The first recorded words of Jesus are these:
In
Matthew, to John the Baptist when John says that it is not fitting for him to
baptize Jesus: “Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all
righteousness” (St. Matthew 3:15)
In
Mark, as he begins his public ministry: “The time has come. The Kingdom of God
is near. Repent and believe the good news” (St. Mark 1:15)
In
Luke, to his parents who had sought him for several days after he had
disappeared at the age of 12 when they visited Jerusalem: “Why were you
searching for me? Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” (St. Luke
2:49)
In
John, to two who followed him when John the Baptist had pointed him out as the
Lamb of God, he said, “What do you want?” (St. John 1:38).
These words are significant, for they set the theme of
Jesus’ life and mission: to fulfill the law and will of God, to bring the
message and truth of salvation, to show himself as the one who reveals the
nature of God, and the one who challenges people to come into the heart of God.
The last words of Jesus before his death are also
significant. Traditionally they have been counted as seven in number, and on
Good Friday, they have been frequently preached on. But there are really eight,
as you will see. Each stands out in a particular way. They come from the four
Gospels, though only two are recorded twice. They follow a logical order, and
teach and challenge us as we reflect on the actions which saved the world from
eternal ruin, and opened the door to eternal joy and rapture.
1. “Father,
forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing”
(Luke 23:34)
Did they really not know? They put to death a man who
had been proclaimed innocent, three times, by the highest local Roman
authority. It had all been engineered--obviously, since one may assume that
middle of the night arrests without witnesses were not the custom. Jesus’ first
words to those who arrested him were, “I was with you in the Temple every day
and you did nothing then.”
They knew that what they were doing was wrong and
unjust. Very much so. It was dark work. John’s Gospel said, “Men prefer darkness,
for their deeds are evil.”
What they did not know was that he was the Son of God
and the Messiah. Paul writes, “Had they known, they would not have crucified
the Lord of Glory.” They knew the claims he had made and they knew what people
were saying. “Hosanna to the Son of David!” cried the crowd on Palm Sunday.
“Rabbi, rebuke your disciples!” said the rulers. “Are you the Son of God?” they
asked when he was on trial. “If you are the Christ, tell us plainly,” they had
said.
He was an innocent victim. Even the Roman centurion made
that observation. “Surely this was a son of God--surely this man was innocent.”
Sadly, not unique. Jesus was one of thousands then and there have been and are
now innocent victims of numerous crimes and assaults. There are and were many
who suffer wrongfully, and the outrage cries out daily.
They knew that the hands and feet which they transfixed
were innocent, but they were ignorant that they were the hands and feet of
their Savior--that the pierced heart released the flood by which earth and
stars and sky and ocean were freed from sin--that the thorned brow wore indeed
the crown of the King of Israel. Even the mockers were right: “He saved
others,” they said. “This is the King of the Jews,” said the sign.
The prayer, then, was heard. “Father, forgive them.” By
the very actions they committed, the forgiveness of sins--effected by the
shedding of blood--came about. “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what
they are doing.” This is the most
unexpected of the eight words from the cross.
Who are “they”? The Jewish council that condemned him?
Pilate, whose limp leadership permitted a bloodthirsty crowd to decide for him?
The Roman soldiers who wielded the whip, plaited the crown of thorns, pounded
the nails? The crowd who said, “Release for us Barabbas! As for this man,
crucify him!”? Judas, who betrayed him? The disciples who abandoned him? Yes.
And more.
For it is the sins of the world which are forgiven. Your
sins. Those whose sins hurt you. Even the great sins. Even the greatest sins.
This is love--as vast as the galaxy, as measureless as
the boundaries of the universe, as incomprehensible as the mind and heart of
God. And this is the God who is to be our judge at the end of time. We are
fortunate indeed.
2. “I tell
you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise” (St.
Luke 23:43)
There were two thieves crucified with him. The sons of
Zebedee, or their mother on their behalf, had asked to sit on the left and
right hand of Jesus when he came into his kingdom. Jesus had responded that it
was a privilege not his to grant, but only by the Father in heaven. Strange
that the honor was given to two thieves, whose names were never known and whose
thrones were wooden crosses placed outside the city gates. For it was by the
Cross and on the Cross that Jesus came into his kingdom and opened it to
others. Strange that the first one who receive the promise to enter it, once it
was assured, was the unknown thief--our brother in heaven.
It is said in the Gospels that when the authorities
taunted him, that those who were crucified with him cast the same in his teeth.
It is natural to do so. The fury of the downtrodden, the chronically
unfortunate, even the habitual criminal and sinner and violent to curse others.
But one realized what he was saying, and saw his last
hope. The last hope truly. He came to himself, like the prodigal son, and
looked to the far one and said, “Don’t you fear God? We have received the just
sentence of our lives, but he has done nothing.” And to the one in the middle
of the three. “Jesus,” he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your
kingdom.”
By these words the nameless man admitted a need for God,
the sinfulness of his life, proclaimed his belief in Jesus’ innocence and power
to save, and prayed for a simple remembrance. They are words of deep faith. He
is the very first to realize--or to hope--that the crucifixion is not a
disaster. He is far ahead of the disciples. The disciples, who had walked with
Jesus for 2-3 years, had fled and were utterly at a loss, overcome with
despair.
Jesus words to him are the most puzzling of the eight words from the cross. “I tell you the
truth, today you will be with me in paradise.” It brushes off all the mockery
and the taunts, as if they had no effect and no power.
3. “Dear
woman, here is your son.” “Here is your mother” (St.
John 19:26- 27)
Mary was probably staying in Bethany with the sisters
Mary and Martha, with their brother Lazarus whom Jesus had so recently raised
from the dead. They were personal friends of Jesus and Bethany was a very short
distance from Jerusalem--2 or 3 miles probably. Mary is probably about 45-50
years old at this time.
One can imagine the message coming to her that Jesus had
been taken and condemned to death, that he is being led to crucifixion right
now. She came at once. Imagine her state. She had loved him perfectly from the
time of the annunciation and had seen him grow from infancy to childhood to
early manhood. She was the only one who had known him all his life.
She had seen him embark on his public ministry. She had
heard the words in the Temple when Jesus was only 40 days old, “He shall be a
sign for the rising and falling of many in Israel, and a sword shall pierce
your own heart also.” She treasured in her heart, that same heart, the key
words of those early days. She must have pondered the meaning of those
frightening, chilling words, and worried about them as three decades passed.
Now they were being fulfilled. The signs had been there.
The opposition had been there and growing and becoming more and more powerful
and less and less willing to coexist with Jesus and his words. At the time of
his own death, then, he commended his widowed mother to the beloved disciple
John, who alone of the twelve had accompanied Jesus to the cross.
“Dear woman, here is your son.” “Here is your mother.”
The most tender words of the eight
from the cross. Divine callings and the fullness of grace cannot, and should
not, prevent the experience of grief and anguish and ordinary earthly suffering.
And ordinary earthly comfort is the means by which heavenly grace works--a new
family is made. Young John and widowed Mary, both bereaved, those who loved
Jesus best, are brought together. Love continues, and grace abounds.
4. “I am
thirsty” (St. John 19:28)
Jesus had probably not drunk since the evening meal the
night before. It had been more than twelve hours, perhaps as many as eighteen.
No wonder he was thirsty. He asked for water. It was the only request he made
of those who put him to death. Why?
The full quote is, “Jesus, who knew by now that
everything had been completed, and in order to make the Scripture come true,
said, ‘I am thirsty.’” In order to make the Scripture come true--which one?
Probably Psalm 22:15, which we have already looked at. “My throat is dry as
dust, my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth.” A fulfillment of prophecy.
But certainly also a real need. He was truly thirsty. It
is because he was a man, with all the bodily needs of a human being. These are
the most human of the eight words
from the cross.
Jesus once said to a woman of Samaria, drawing water
from a well, “Whoever drinks this water will thirst again, but whoever drinks
the water I shall give him shall never be thirsty again.” Paul had written that
when the Israelites walked in a hot and barren desert and demanded water, and
Moses brought them water from a rock, that that rock was Christ. He satisfies
the thirst of others, but himself thirsts, humanly, on the cross.
He shows, then, with this word, the true state of Man.
One who thirsts for living water--a fallen and ignorant race needing salvation.
“A draft from the water springs of life will be my free gift to the thirsty”
(Revelation 21:6) “Come, you who are thirsty, accept the water of life, a free
gift to all who desire it” (Revelation 22:17b) “You shall draw water with
rejoicing from the springs of salvation” (Isaiah 12) It is our race which
thirsts and in its ignorance bypasses the water of life, generation by
generation. But there are also many who receive from the water springs of
salvation the once-and-for-all quenching of salvation, given by the Lord of
Plenty.
5. “Eli,
eli, lama sabachthani?” (St. Matthew 27:46; St. Mark 15:34)
One of three passages in the Gospels in which the
original words of Jesus are quoted, in the original language. The others are
“Talitha cumi,” (little girl, I say to you, arise) when he raised the daughter
of Jairus. And “ephphatha,” (be opened) to a blind man to whom he restored
sight.
The words mean, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken
me?” The words sound like an acknowledgement of defeat and despair. It appears
as if he couldn’t quite make it to the end. He had gone through arrest with
authority, trial without fear, mockery without answering, scourging and crowning
and carrying the cross and even crucifixion without any sign of breaking.
But it seems that now, at the time of most intense
agony, the futility and hopelessness of his situation has gotten the better of
him. He cries out, wondering why God has abandoned him. Perhaps his broken
voice, altered by the endurance of agony, spoke unclearly so that is “Eli” made
some of the bystanders think he was calling for Elijah. A pathetic statement
that his life and ministry had been based on a mistaken notion--Elijah, the one
supposed to appear before the Messianic age is inaugurated. “Where is Elijah?”
they think he is saying.
He had taught, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they
shall see God.” Yet he with the purest of hearts feels the distance, the
absence of God.
He had taught that whoever would follow him must take up
his cross to do so. Yet now it seems that this is not the way of discipleship
at all.
He had taught that the heavenly Father knows our needs,
and knows even the number of our hairs. Yet now it seems that God is not
watching.
So it seemed. So it seemed. There were those who thought
it was a cry for Elijah, and others apparently who recognized the words for
what they were and remembered them as they were spoken.
But it is no cry of despair. It was not lack of hope or
lack of faith. The cry is the first verse of Psalm 22. The psalm describes the
details of the crucifixion in a prophetic manner. “They pierced my hands and my
feet, they cast lots for my clothing,” etc. The cry of Jesus is a proclamation to
the people, whether they understood it at the time or not. He is saying, “I am
the One to whom the scriptures point.” He began his ministry in Nazareth by
saying, “Today in your hearing this Scripture is fulfilled.” He says now the
same as he closes his ministry.
“Eli, eli, lama sabachthani?” They are the most triumphant of the eight words from
the cross. They are in the same class as riding a donkey into Jerusalem,
fulfilling the prophecy of the humble king. They are in the same class as
acknowledging John the Baptist as the long-awaited Elijah, ushering in the Age
of Messiah.
We have just read Psalm 22. It is not merely a psalm of
despair for it ends in triumph. “He does not despise nor abhor the poor in
their poverty,“ it says, “neither does he hide his face from them; when they
cry to him he hears them.” And “My soul shall live for him,” it says. “Kingship
belongs to the LORD; he rules over the nations,” it says.
Jesus’ words, then, are a statement that “his hour had
at last come.” As he cried out words which seemed to be words of despair, the
world’s greatest hope was becoming a reality.
6. “It is
finished” (St. John 19:30)
This is the word Jesus utters as the last moment of his
death arrives. He says it at the culmination of the many abuses he has suffered
during the previous twelve hours. But they are not words of resignation. He is
not saying, “It’s all over.” He is saying, “It has been accomplished.” He says,
“I have succeeded.” He is saying, “I win!” He is bringing the redemption of the
world into full operation. It is the most
comforting of the eight words from the cross.
God’s will is not to be thwarted--not by evil men of
Judah or Rome who are used to controlling people by issuing orders. Not by
Judas, not by the soldiers, not by the members of the Jewish council, not by
Pilate or his assistants, not by the bloodthirtsy crowd in the cold, pre-dawn
hour. Even when they choose the wrong path, they still find themselves, apart
from God as they are, fulfilling God’s plan.
Jesus becomes now Jacob’s ladder, fixed to the earth by
a piece of wood, lifted up from it by its crosspiece, drawing all men to
himself as he had promised. Now he opens heaven so that from the doorway to
heaven a path reaches down from Glory to earth, with its foot at the cross. The
hour has come. It is celebrated in the beautiful canticle, the Te Deum, which has the line, “When you
had overcome the sharpness of death, you opened the kingdom of heaven to all
believers.”
Jesus had said several times before, “My hour has not yet
come.” When his mother informed him, at a wedding in Cana, that they had run
out of wine, he responded, “My hour has not yet come.” When they sought to
attack him in Galilee, he said, “My hour has not yet come.” When they tried to
arrest him in the Temple, he said, “My hour has not yet come.” But now his hour
had come. It was all going as God had said. Even when Pilate claimed the power
to free or to crucify Jesus, Jesus asserted that Pilate would have no power at
all had it not been given him from above. Now, at last, his hour had come.
The authorities doubtless thought that they had finally
overcome Jesus, that their plan, knife-edge risky but so necessary from their
point of view, had worked out well. They had eliminated Jesus without having a
riot erupt during the festival. It would have been understandable if they were the ones who had said, “It is
finished,” heaving a sigh of relief. But they would have been wrong.
7. “Father,
into your hands I commit my spirit” (St. Luke 23:46)
This is the most intimate
of the eight words from the cross. It is spoken directly to the Father by his
Son. It is not really for human ears. We are bystanders and eavesdroppers. All
words which came before were said either for our benefit or to a human being
for a specific reason. Here, the word is said directly to the Father.
It is a reminder to us bystanders and eavesdroppers that
Jesus’ true home was with the Father in heaven. Before the worlds were made,
that was his home. As John’s Gospel says, “In the beginning was the Word and
the Word was with God.” To his disciples just a day or so earlier, he had said,
“I am going to my Father.”
The Word shows us the way to the Father. “I go to
prepare a place for you,” said Jesus to the disciples. He also said, “You will
drink the cup that I will drink.” There is no other way to get to that place he
has prepared for us. “No one comes to the Father but by me,” said Jesus, and
then he walked the way of death. For those in Christ, death is a way of peace.
Even after the cross and the pain, for Jesus there is a time of intimacy with
the Father, a time of peace. It is the joy of the last part of the long, hard
journey before the arrival home. Weary as one may be, or even uncomfortable or
even in pain from the journey, there is eagerness, expectation, and excitement
when the End comes into sight.
So is any homecoming in life, and so it is for the final
homecoming we call death. I have seen it many times at the bedsides of those
completing this mortal life and relinquishing their lives into the hands of
God. Like many saints and martyrs before them, they quote the words of Jesus:
“Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” It is the intimate self-offering
which is possible when one truly believes that one’s true home is with God, that
the true relationship is one of love, and that the true state of life is joy.
It is the last moment of deepest earthly intimacy before the eternal and
perfect intimacy begins.
8. [A loud
cry] With a loud cry, Jesus breathed his last (St. Matthew
27:50, St. Mark 15:37).
You see, there is an eighth word. Not traditionally
counted as part of the famous seven, it is nonetheless a vital part of the
whole testimony of Jesus from the cross. Just as God created the world in seven
days, and then completed the creation with the Resurrection on the eighth day,
so we must understand the fullness of the last words from the cross with an
eighth which completes the seven.
The loud cry is the ultimate rending of the human life
of Jesus, the moment of his death. His flesh is left lifeless, hanging
grotesquely from the cross; his spirit has gone to the place of the departed,
there to rend hell and preach to the departed, as described in the First Letter
of Peter.
What is perceived, then, as the ultimate loss and
destruction, the final ridding of the earth of Jesus so long and desperately
and dangerously sought by the authorities, is actually the beginning of the
victory. It is the point of turning. This “eighth word from the cross” is like
the “eighth day of creation”; the day of rest, the Sabbath, the seventh day, is
followed by the liturgical, theological “eighth day”—the day of re-creation, of
renewal and redemption, of resurrection. The first assault of the divine
against the gates of destruction is not seen on earth. The first assault after
the crucifixion is upon hell, whose greatest weapon is death.
This is always the pattern of our fighting God--to wait
until the powers of evil have done their worst and it appears as if there is absolutely no way that they can lose--when
all hope for truth, goodness, justice, and love is gone, and the powers of
darkness, death, and destruction have no more that they can do--then to strike
hard and decisively where it is least expected. God acted this way numerous
times in the Old Testament, and now he does it best of all, when the human life
of Jesus, the incarnate God, has been forfeited by treason through hell’s
greatest weapon: death.
The New Testament presents Jesus as coming to destroy
that weapon. The letter to the Hebrews puts it this way: "Since the
children have flesh and blood, [the Son] too shared in their humanity so that
by his death he might destroy him who holds the power of death--that is, the
devil--and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of
death" (Hebrews 2:14-15).
Jesus destroyed death by entering death's domain as a
mortal, and then breaking death from within. He accepted the wages for sins he
had not committed, so that those who are redeemed would not ever have to do so.
Though he is personally without sin, Jesus came voluntarily and in love to
accept the consequence of sin, so that those who are under sin's condemnation
could be rescued. It was the only way salvation could be achieved. The Gospel
according to Mark presents Jesus as experiencing the consequences of this
separation, in that he dies with a loud cry (Mark
15:37).
As a mortal, Jesus experiences the fullest alienation
from the Father. This alienation is the meaning of death, the darkest,
clammiest, emptiest, most endless and bottomless of any hiding place for life.
Even he who reveals himself as "the light of the world" (John 8:12) could be lost in its
darkness for a time.
Yet not even the utter darkness of death could hold the
Author of Life, for that "light shines in the darkness, but the darkness
has not understood it" (John 1:5). At
a pivotal moment in his classic saga of Middle-earth, J. R. R. Tolkien has one
of his characters say, "Through darkness you shall come to the light.” In
that one sentence the mythic understanding of the way of the cross is set
forth. Though the way of the cross led to torment, crucifixion, death, and
burial, it was not the end of the journey.
The loud cry is the most
fearful of the eight words from the cross, but it is also the most exultant, for it is impossible for
a crucified man, in the final slump of death, to make any sound or even to
breathe. The great cry at the moment of death, heard as the last impossible
expulsion of breath from the dying Jesus, can also be seen as the first exultant
cry of triumph at the victory he has won.
Jesus said, "The reason my Father loves me is that
I lay down my life--only to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I
lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to
take it up again. This command I received from my Father" (John 10:17-18). Crucified, dead, and
buried on Friday, Jesus was raised to life early on Sunday morning. The book of
the Acts of the Apostles says, "God raised Jesus from the dead, freeing
him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its
hold on him” (Acts 2:24).
The final enemy was to be conquered by the resurrection
of Jesus on the third day. The cross had done its worst. It was not enough.