Good Friday 2017
- John 18:1-19:42
God's Passion/Our Passion
Each year, year after year after year, Christians gather on
Good Friday to rehearse this story - what we call the Passion Narrative. On
Palm Sunday we read versions from Matthew, Mark and Luke. On Good Friday it has
always been from John. Each gospel offers a slightly different view of what
happened that day nearly 2000 years ago. It is like looking at a diamond from
different angles - one sees different facets, different sparkles, different
ways the light plays off the gem stone.
For John Jesus is Light - and His Light is the Life of the
world. We call it Good Friday, even though it looks as if the light is
extinguished. But for people of faith we know that is just not the case. We
know the rest of the story. We know that the darkness has not overcome the
light.
But we do know a few things about darkness in today's world.
We see it from far off, we see it up close and personal. From the tragedy like
the World Trade Towers, the tragedies of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, we see
it in ISIS, in Syria, in chemical weapons, dropping MOAB, the world’s largest
non-nuclear bomb, we see it in friends and family members who suffer from
ailments like cancer and Alzheimer’s, we see it in young men whose lives are so
broken they go on senseless shooting sprees in schools, movie theaters,
churches and shopping malls.
There is darkness for those who have lost their jobs, for
the child born of a mother addicted to crack cocaine, for the homeless, the
hungry, the destitute and those without jobs here and around the world. For
those who live under oppressive military dictatorships, for those mothers, fathers, sisters or brothers who sit
on death row, for those who live with HIV/AIDS. We know some things about
darkness.
Darkness for John is evil - specifically the evil of living
under the military yoke of Rome. Yet, so much more among a people commissioned
to take care of people who live on the margins but who increasingly go about
business as usual – to be focused only on religious ritual and not religious
practices. Even more so, John and John’s community hold the memory of Jesus
standing up to evil, to the Imperial powers and the ruling religious
authorities, to say that a lot of people, most people, are not getting the kind
of care and support they need to survive – the kind of care and support our God
commands us to provide as individuals and as a community.
Every April, April 4, we celebrate the life and death of The
Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In
the church we observe the date of a martyr's death, not their birthday like the
rest of the country does in January. The night before he was assassinated, he
had been in Memphis, TN, to support the sanitation workers, garbage men, who
were striking for a living wage. In his last days he was also an outspoken
critic of our country’s involvement in Southeast Asia, against the war in Viet
Nam. Some years before that, Dr. King was incarcerated in the Birmingham, Alabama,
jail, from which he wrote a series of
letters urging white Christians to join his movement to end racial
discrimination - segregation, what amounted to apartheid in America.
In one of these letters Dr. King quotes one of the 20th
century's most renowned theologians, Reinhold Neibuhr. Quoting from Neibuhr's
book, Moral Man and Immoral Society,
Dr. King reminds the white clergy of Birmingham that "groups are more
immoral than individuals." This is just as true today as when Neibuhr and
King brought it to light. It is observed that more often than not individuals
rarely act immorally, or practice bad ethics on their own. Such behavior
patterns usually emerge in the actions and attitudes of a group - however large
or small. It is the group mentality, or to quote the sociologist Erik Fromm,
the "herd mentality" that drives greater hatred than the individual.
Think of the Holocaust, the Ku Klux Klan, Rawanda, Pol Pot, The Inquisition,
the Expulsion by the Church of the Jews from Spain, the Crusades and numerous
other similar movements throughout history. The list of examples, sadly, is
endless
This theory suggests that evil always needs help. Evil needs
companions! Evil, the Devil, does not and cannot act on its own in order to
achieve its intended goal. By comparison, "Goodness" or
"Godliness" can always stand and act on its own merits.
This is what is going on in this story about Jesus. Evil had
just enough companions to crucify him on that Friday, the Day of Preparation
for the Passover, which that year was to be on the Sabbath. The collusion and
collaboration between the Roman soldiers, politicians, religious authorities
already on the payroll of Rome, and the usual crowd of
"rubberneckers" always looking for a gory site to behold, was just
enough to put him on a cross and let him hang there for all to see what the
consequences will be for those who dare to act out of Goodness and Godliness to
speak truth to power.
It is the Day of Preparation before the Passover. Jesus has
been arrested. People all over Jerusalem are preparing for the Passover feast.
Lambs are being slaughtered for the Passover feast. Pilate asks Jesus, “What is
truth?” Pilate cannot understand that Jesus is Truth. No one seems to
understand, even to this day, that God’s
new revelation and God’s Good News is not a doctrine or an idea, but a person –
a person like any one of us. “A person,”
writes Evelyn Underhill, “whose story and
statements, in every point and detail, give us some deep truth about the life
and will of God who creates and sustains us, and about the power and vocation
of a soul which is transformed in Him, and pays ungrudgingly the price of
generous love.” Underhill, The School of Charity, p. 26.
John’s passion has numerous unique details: Jesus sends
Judas out from the last supper; Jesus is not identified by Judas’ kiss but
steps forward announcing, “I am he;”
Jesus is not silent before Pilate, but speaks to him; Jesus carries his own
cross and does not stumble or fall. But is there any more tender and yet
powerful moment than when Jesus, already nailed to the cross, as his last act
of divine charity gives up his spirit –
or, as we used to say, handed over his spirit.
It is that “giving up,” that handing over, that compels us to pay attention to this story
year in and year out. In both Hebrew and in Greek there is just one word that
means spirit, breath and wind. All three are understood to come from God. God's
breath is our breath, God's spirit is what sustains our life, and God’s wind fills
our sails and directs us and sends us places we would never imagine going
ourselves to do things we could never imagine doing. Here in his final act of
charity toward humankind, Jesus gives up his spirit – he hands over, he offers
us His Spirit-the Spirit of God.
Jesus does not give in to the herd mentality. He does not
give in to group evil. He remains steadfast in speaking truth to power, just
like Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Ghandhi, Pauli Murray, Pete Seeger, Rosa
Parks, Martin King, Joan Baez, and just
like so many other individuals throughout human history who have made a
difference.
This story we read together today is drenched with meaning.
Today let us focus on the fact that the choice is ours. The choice is always
ours. Evil is always looking for companions. Evil is always looking for help.
And the choice to side with Evil is often attractive. There always appears to
be something in it for me, for us, even if it is just the cheap thrill of
watching someone else suffer.
The other choice, of course, is to stand up to Evil. To
stand your ground. Not to give in to the group. To speak truth to power. Or, to
simply walk away and say I will not participate in this.
The world is still a dangerous place. There is no limit,
however, as to how much Goodness and Godliness just one person can give to the
world. If there is one moment to remember from this Passion Narrative of
John's, it is that final moment when Jesus bows his head and hands over his
spirit to you, to me, to us, to the world - that moment when God's Passion
becomes our Passion!
He gives it to us. He is still giving it to us. The man who
healed people, helped people, fed people, gave outsiders dignity, and welcomed
all to sit at his table and share a meal, gives his spirit to us. The question
that resides deep within the rites and rituals of Good Friday, however, is will
we accept his spirit? Will we take God’s Spirit and make it our own? Will we
set our sails so as to capture God’s divine wind, breath and spirit and allow
it to direct us and take us to places we have never been to do things we have
never done?
The world needs His spirit. The world needs your spirit. The
Church needs your spirit. You can accept His spirit which he gives away, which
is given for the world, not just for Christians, not just for believers, but
for the whole world, and you can do something beautiful with your life and bear
much fruit. The World needs you. The Church needs you. God needs you. We all
need one another. Our choice must be to accept that spirit of Goodness and
Godliness, the Spirit of God’s Divine Charity, and make it our own. We must
allow God’s Passion to become our Passion. When you do, what looks like a
tragic story becomes good. A very good story! This is why we call it Good
Friday!
Amen.
Amen.
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