Good Friday
Holden Village
March 29, 2013
We
all need protection.
We
worship inside tonight to be protected from outside forces – the
cool breeze, the slippery ice, the wilderness we cannot fully trust
and certainly cannot control.
There
is so much that we need protection from. As we are bombarded by
horror stories on the nightly news, alarmist reporting and over
opinionated everything...we are more and more aware of every threat,
every potential for harm, every dark corner, every danger is raised
and the alarms within begin to go off. We are oh, so aware of all
that we need protection from.
In
the passion story according to the gospel of John there is a constant
theme of protection. The acts of protecting are not overt, the acts
of protecting do not help everyone. Certainly, Jesus was not
protected. But at every step Jesus was the one protecting.
In
the garden, at the moment of his arrest Jesus steps forward to meet
the military detachment, meaning 600 military soldiers. 600 armed
men all for the arrest of one unarmed man. Jesus steps forward and
says, “leave the others alone, it is me you are looking for.”
Protection is present for every other person in that garden. Even
Judas, even the betrayer is protected.
And
while he is walking the road in Jerusalem, the slow, heavy and
death-filled march with the cross Jesus stops. Jesus looks at his
mother, the woman who bore him in a crude animal stall and who will
now watch him die like a crude animal. Mary, the mother of Jesus, is
standing next to a disciple when Jesus says, “Woman, here is your
son.” And then, to the disciple, “Here is your mother”
introducing person to person, protecting his family, protecting his
followers. Jesus is making sure that no one will be left alone in
their grief and despair. Jesus is giving protection from emotional
isolation, protecting his mother from all that it meant in that day
for a woman to be without the connection to a man. Even as he walks
with the cross on his back, Jesus is offering surprising and
meaningful protection right where it is needed most...at the foot of
the cross.
Jesus
is even protecting the Word of God. Throughout the reading of the
gospel we heard the recurring theme of Jesus doing something or
saying something in order to fulfill what had been written. Since
the beginning of creation, God's word has been giving hints and
glimpses into what the life and death of Jesus would mean for the
world. And here, throughout the passion story Jesus is obedient to
the Word of God. Jesus is obedient to what the prophets spoke in
God's name. Jesus is protecting the promises and story of God, so
that our sinful and broken world might know judgment and saving grace
through this cross he is carrying. Those simple words, “to fulfill
what the scriptures have written” are historical and rich acts of
protection.
There
is so much that we need protection from, and Jesus is the one
offering the protection for us. And what about those that need
protection from
us?
Who
protects Jesus from our sin and our pride? Who protects from our fear
and lashing out? Who protects from our foolishness and lack of
compassion?
Who
protects those in the world who are most vulnerable? When our pride
and fear and hardened hearts keep us from speaking up or acting out,
who protects the least among us? Who protects from the news headlines
and the alarmist reports? Who protects the victims of hatred and
cruelty? Who protects those that suffer from emotional pain and
persecution? Who protects when we're too busy, too good, too selfish,
too righteous?
The
unarmed, betrayed, rejected one. Why does Jesus protect us? To save
us from all suffering and evil? No, we are not rescued from hurting
and sorrow, nor are we protected from the cross of dying. Jesus
protects us from every being alone, Jesus protects us from
surrendering to the darkness of our lives by creating a way –
through death and life – to the God of love, the God of
relationships, the God who suffers with us, the God who ultimately
forgives by the way of suffering and death and love.
Jesus
takes all of this to the cross and protects us by uniting us with the
criminal, the forgotten, uniting us even with the ones we hurt, with
the least and lonely, with those who are sick, with those who are
dying.
And
who protects Jesus? No one.
You
do not.
I
do not.
God
does not.
Jesus
is on the cross, alone, forsaken.
And
he speaks, “It is finished.”
Our
separation from God – it is finished.
The
ruling of darkness is our world – it is finished.
The
brokenness of our hearts – it is finished.
The
final word of death – it is finished.
All
of this, finished, in the cross of Jesus Christ.
Tonight
when you come to the cross and pray, know that you are protected in
Christ Jesus. And may this protection allow you to offer protection,
relationship and forgiveness to everyone you have refused before.
Only
Jesus Christ has truly offered the protection we so desire and need,
and we have to live with that, and in that.
It
is finished.
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