To read the texts click on the texts: Isa52:13-53:12; Heb 4:14-16; 5:7-9; Jn18:1-19:42
We celebrate today what
is traditionally known as Good Friday. And it would seem strange first of all
that we celebrate the day on which Jesus died, and stranger still that we
consider such a day Good. What really is the reason why we celebrate? And why is
the day on which Jesus died called “Good”? The answer to both these questions
can only be found if we focus as all the Evangelists and especially John has
done on the Passion and death of our Lord from the perspective of the
Resurrection. Because if Christ were not resurrected, if he were not raised
from the dead, his death would have no meaning, his death would have been the
end. But it is only because he rose again, that his death took on a new
meaning, a meaning that death never possessed before.
It is in the light of the
resurrection therefore that we must look at the death of Christ and what it
means for us today … and yet, we must remember that the Passion and Death of
Jesus were indeed historical events, that Jesus had to suffer and die. That
Jesus had to go through the ignominy of the cross before his resurrection.
In yesterday’s liturgy,
the Eucharist of Maundy Thursday, we witnessed how in a very symbolic way Jesus
brought his whole life together by giving to his disciples two important
symbols – the washing of the feet and the breaking and sharing of bread and wine.
These two powerful symbols were his way of showing them that on the one hand
their lives too had to be lives of service and reaching out just as his life
had been, and on the other hand that they must be lives in community, lives in
union with each other, lives not as individuals, but as a group of people all
moving toward God. And on the day on which he died, the day following the last
supper, Jesus made those symbols a reality. He not only symbolically washed his
disciples’ feet and shared not just bread and wine, but rather his very self,
his very being, his very life. And what is more important is that he gave his
life willingly. This going to his death willingly, was in a way a summary of
his whole life, a bringing together of his whole life, a life which had always
been a life of giving, a life of sharing, a life for others, a life of love.
Besides being narrated so beautifully for us in the Gospel of John that we just
heard, it is also narrated equally beautifully in the Song of the Suffering
Servant from the book of Isaiah that we heard as our first reading. This song
though written 550 years before Jesus was never really understood till the
Passion and Death of Jesus. When Isaiah uses the double expression, “that which
has not been told” and “which they have never heard”, he is not repeating
himself, but rather intends to bring to our attention how incredible, how
incomprehensible the whole mystery is. The whole thought of the people of that
time, their world would have been turned upside down. He was a man of sorrows
and grief because he bore our own sorrows and grief. In the face of violence
from those who despised him, he submitted willingly. Not only did people pay no
attention to him, they positively despised him, rejected him and yet the man to
whom they refused fellowship was truly one of them. We are told my dear
brothers and sisters, through the Song of the Suffering Servant that God
protects and saves not through war like aggressiveness, but through humility.
Redemption is through the mystery of suffering. We must be confident therefore
even in the midst of suffering because Jesus himself experienced trials and
tribulations, suffering and ignominy, and is thus able to share with us our
own. The priest of the Old Testament, as we heard in the letter to the Hebrews
offers sacrifices other than himself for the forgiveness of sins, Jesus offers
his very self. Jesus became the High priest through the mystery of his Passion,
Death, Resurrection and Exaltation. Since he gave his life for others, his
Father gave him back his own life. Jesus died believing that the Father would
raise him on the third day and He did.
And this is why we
celebrate today, and this is why the day on which Jesus died is called Good.
In view of all this what
is the relevance for me today? What does Good Friday mean for me now, here, in
my situation? In answering these questions I must point out first of all how
difficult it is to understand how we can be so moved at the Passion of our
Lord, and oblivious to the Passion of our next door neighbour. It is difficult
to understand how we can shed tears at the suffering and death of Jesus, and
not be moved one bit at the anguish and suffering of our brothers and sisters
around us. It is difficult to understand how we can look up at the cross of
Christ and be overcome with pity and shame, but untouched by the numerous
crosses that we see people carrying everyday. The relevance of Good Friday lies
in being able to see Christ crucified today. We can only do this if our lives
are modelled on the life of Christ, lives that are lived for others. To live
for others means first of all that we have to forget ourselves, that we have to
get rid of the Ego, the I, that we have to think of others before we think of
ourselves. The Israelites of old were called as we heard yesterday to be a
contrast community, a chosen people, a nation set apart. We are called to be
that contrast community today, not in the way that we dress, in the food that
we eat or in the language we speak, but rather through our way of proceeding,
in our way of behaving, in our way of being, in our way of love. Christ is
calling us today not so much to die for him, but to live for him. Are you
willing to live for Christ?
Let us pray then as we
unveil the cross of Christ in a few moments from now that our celebration of
the Passion and Death of Jesus will transform our lives into lives that
resemble his, so that like Jesus, we too in our own ways may be men and women
for others. It is only in this context that suffering and pain and death take
on a new meaning as they did in the life of Christ. Amen.
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