Friday, April 10, 2009

Good Friday

Mark 15:22-39
22The soldiers took Jesus to Golgotha, which means "Place of a Skull." 23There they gave him some wine mixed with a drug to ease the pain, but he refused to drink it.
24They nailed Jesus to a cross and gambled to see who would get his clothes. 25It was about nine o'clock in the morning when they nailed him to the cross. 26On it was a sign that told why he was nailed there. It read, "This is the King of the Jews." 27-28The soldiers also nailed two criminals on crosses, one to the right of Jesus and the other to his left.
29People who passed by said terrible things about Jesus. They shook their heads and shouted, "Ha! So you're the one who claimed you could tear down the temple and build it again in three days. 30Save yourself and come down from the cross!"
31The chief priests and the teachers of the Law of Moses also made fun of Jesus. They said to each other, "He saved others, but he can't save himself. 32If he is the Messiah, the king of Israel, let him come down from the cross! Then we will see and believe." The two criminals also said cruel things to Jesus.
33About noon the sky turned dark and stayed that way until around three o'clock. 34Then about that time Jesus shouted, "Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?" which means, "My God, my God, why have you deserted me?"
35Some of the people standing there heard Jesus and said, "He is calling for Elijah." 36One of them ran and grabbed a sponge. After he had soaked it in wine, he put it on a stick and held it up to Jesus. He said, "Let's wait and see if Elijah will come and take him down!" 37Jesus shouted and then died.
38At once the curtain in the temple tore in two from top to bottom.
39A Roman army officer was standing in front of Jesus. When the officer saw how Jesus died, he said, "This man really was the Son of God!"

Good Friday is traditionally a day for focusing on sin and its impact on the world, as we consider Jesus’ passion and death. As followers of Jesus, we are called not just to look outside of ourselves and condemn the evil that is “out there,” but to begin by looking inside and acknowledging that we, too, have played a part in the horrible consequences of sin on God’s beautiful creation.
As we reflect on Jesus’ suffering and sacrifice - his willingness to become weak, his willingness to become helpless, his willingness to become as one of us -- we imitate him and share in his passion by accepting our own weakness and helplessness.
It’s in this weakness that we can enter more deeply into His work of love and redemption as we ask God to transform us—to purge us of our errors and to break the chains of our self-inflicted oppression, recognizing that resurrection and Life follow the cross.
Take some time today to sit and reflect on where you have been in error or where you have been weak. Ask God to show you something about yourself that is in need of changing. Let yourself feel the wrong of it without giving in to guilt or self-condemnation. Allow yourself to acknowledge fault and God’s unconditional for you, together. Feel that you are sinful AND dearly precious to God. Know that Jesus’ resurrection power is at work in you even now. Spend time in prayer, talking and listening to God.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thursday and Friday this week, I've been thinking a lot about the humanity of Jesus. At the Last Supper, it must have meant so much to him to be with the friends he loved the most. It must have been strengthening to him to be in community with them before he faced the horrorible things ahead. The mental picture of him washing their feet is such a touching way of showing love and saying goodbye.

Reading today's blog, I was thinking about Jesus saying to God, "Why have you forsaken me?" It reminded me that he really understands how I feel sometimes and loves me when I'm in that place.

Anonymous said...

At the Good Friday service last night we were invited to taste bitter herbs, such as Jesus and his friends would have had at a Passover meal, and vinegar, such as was lifted up to Jesus when he was on the cross, right at the end. Flogged, beaten, spat upon, mocked - what a bitter experience that would have been and with a bitter taste, no less. Yet Jesus rose from the dead in love with the world that had rejected him. Matthew said awhile back that God loves us more because of God's power - not less. In the world the saying is - if it seems too good to be true, it probably is. Christ was in the world but not of it, so the great exception to that saying is God - and God's goodness and love for us. This is the place at which what we believe about the world and what we believe about God part company. It's so hard to wrap our minds around the greatness of the goodness of God. God has wrapped God's arms around the world in love.