10 April 2020
Text: John 18:1-19:42
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
We
Christians say today is a “good” day. It
is the day of the cross. The cross is
our chief Christian symbol. We decorate
our homes with them. We wear them. Our churches have them inside and out. The cross. The good cross.
But
what is a cross? The cross was not
merely a way to execute prisoners, it was a means of humiliation and torture. It was so awful that the great statesman Cicero
urged polite people to never say the word.
To the shame of the civilized Romans, the cross was the most evil,
psychopathic, and inhuman device in the Imperial toolbox for subjugating other
peoples and encouraging obedience to the government. To the emperors and the governors the cross
was indeed good.
The
word “cross” is often used as a metaphor. The word “excruciating” that we use in English
to this day, meaning severe pain, is based on the word cross. We speak of suffering as “bearing one’s cross.” It was actually Jesus who taught us this
metaphor. “Take up your cross,” says our
Lord, “and follow Me.” To follow Jesus
is to bear the cross. The good cross.
Sometimes,
it means a literal cross: as it did for St. Peter, who went to his own death,
literally following our Lord Jesus Christ, to a cross of his own. And other early disciples of Jesus were likewise
crucified. A hundred years ago in Muslim
Turkey (a country that used to be the Christian Asia Minor), Armenian Christians
– men, women, and even children – were crucified rather than renounce the faith
and become Muslim. The good cross.
But
for most of us, the cross is metaphorical. As followers of our Lord Jesus Christ, we
suffer mockery, abuse, perhaps the loss of job, some endure lawsuits and severe
threats to their ability to make a living. At many times and places, Christians have been
hated and even persecuted. Today, Christians
in Muslim countries may be somewhat tolerated, but typically cannot worship,
cannot talk to Muslims about Jesus, cannot live free from fear of beatings and
executions and yes, in some cases, a literal cross. The good cross.
To
be human is to bear the cross: the cross of mortality, the cross of aging, the
cross of conflict, the cross of the struggle to survive, the cross of loneliness
and depression, the cross of temptation, the cross of addiction, the cross of
health issues, and yes the cross of our body’s susceptibility to viruses. The good cross.
What
is so good about the cross, dear friends?
What is so good about Good Friday?
“So
they took Jesus, and He went out, bearing His own cross, to the place called
the place of the skull, which in Aramaic is called Golgotha. There they crucified Him.”
Many
times, our Lord said that to follow Him, we must “take up our cross.” Many times He said that He would be arrested,
treated shamefully, be crucified, die, and rise the third day. In the Gospels, whenever our Lord made these
plain declarations of what would happen on the first Good Friday, it was as if
nobody believed Him. The disciples
dismissed His words. Perhaps they
thought Jesus was being metaphorical, that this was just a figure of speech. But no, Jesus was sent to a literal cross, and
He suffered the excruciating torture of the ordeal of crucifixion, which for Jesus
was more than just the physical and psychological pain. He suffered spiritually, to the depths of His
perfect soul, because He felt the burden of the sins of the world and the wrath
of His Father – His literal Father – placed upon His head, like the Scapegoat
of the Old Testament. Jesus suffered
betrayal, denial, and abandonment of His closest and most beloved friends. He felt the wrath of God. He and He alone bore the cross, the good
cross, the cross of the atonement of the world.
And
why is this good, dear friends? Obviously,
it is good for us who were spared the cross that we deserve. We benefit from this “happy exchange” of our
sins for His righteousness. We are the
beneficiaries of the cross, like the terrorist Barabbas, who was released from
prison in exchange for the miscarriage of justice of crucifying the innocent Jesus.
We can all say, “I am Barabbas.” But how is any of this good? To the militant atheist, this seems
perverted. It seems unjust. It seems as if our Father is arbitrary and abusive,
and the Son is a fool. It seems as if we
Christians are very sick people indeed to adopt the symbol of the cross and to
call this day “good.”
What
the atheists and the mockers of the world are missing, dear friends, is the
concept of love. Jesus went willingly to
the cross out of love. He suffered the
abuse and torture of the Jews and the Romans out of love. He bore the wrath of the Father out of love – love
for the Father whose will He obeys, and love for us whom He redeemed by His
mercy, by His exchange of our sins for His righteousness, by His good cross. The cross is indeed a symbol of death, but it
has been transformed into a symbol of love. Jesus said that greater love has no man than
that He would die for His friends. And
because of love, Jesus dies even for His enemies, even as He called Judas “friend.” As Pilate was concerned about remaining “Caesar’s
friend,” he did not understand that Jesus died for Him as well, that He is Christ’s
friend. Jesus dies for the sins of the
world, and He does this voluntarily out of love.
The
world struggles to understand love. Our
culture sees love in twisted and selfish ways. The world calls lust “love” and calls love “foolishness.” Those who devote their lives to love are seen
as fools. The world celebrates wealth
and power and fame. The world idolizes Caesar
and looks upon the Church with scorn. That
has always been the cross of the Christian.
The good cross.
Ultimately,
the cross, the cross of Jesus, is a good cross, and this day of the cross, this
Friday before Easter is Good Friday, because the cross of Jesus is the cross of
love, the cross of the redemption of the entire world. The gift of salvation is offered to all, to friend
and foe, for when it comes to the death of Jesus for His friends, even His foes
are His friends. The entire world bears
the cross of the virus of sin, and only the cross is the treatment, the
universal treatment, that people are free to accept or reject. This good cross is the inoculation that we all
need against Satan, the one who afflicted us, “patient zero” in the universe
who continues to torment us and make us terminally ill. The cross is the antidote. The good cross.
Dear
friends, because of our Lord’s love for us, the cross is also a symbol of life.
In the greatest irony in the history of
the world, Jesus takes this psychopathic instrument that was put into the
service of Caesar: the state ruler who considered himself to be a god – a symbol
of inhumanity and death – and Jesus Himself, the true King who is truly God, transforms
the cross into the symbol of our Redemption, of life, of healing, of
reconciliation, and of what it means to be truly human: love. The good cross!
In
suffering, Jesus overcomes suffering. In
death, Jesus conquers death. In bearing
the brunt of Satan, Jesus destroys Satan.
In His innocence, Jesus removes the virus of sin forever. The
cross. The good cross.
“When
Jesus had received the sour wine, He said, “It is finished,” and He bowed His
head and gave up His Spirit.” On the
cross “it is finished.” The mission is
completed. Satan is defeated. Death is destroyed. Sins are forgiven. Love conquers all. And this cross, though it took our Lord’s
life, will not keep it. For “in the
place where He was crucified there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb.” We know what happens in the garden tomb, dear
brothers and sisters. The whole world
knows.
And
so today is the day of the cross. We are
bold to call it a good cross. We are
bold to call this Friday a Good Friday. And
on this Good Friday, we metaphorically stand at the cross, the good cross, with
our eyes now turned to the tomb. And we
wait with joyful expectation for what comes next.
Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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