Friday, April 3, 2015

Jesus restores us to life – John 18:1-19:42

Good Friday; Holy Cross - St. Stanislaus parish.


He came at night.  Judas came at night, with lamps and torches.  He had walked out on the Light of the World incarnate, to live in darkness.  He’d exchanged the Light of Salvation for lamps and torches, meager hope to illumine a cold, dark world.  Jesus had longed and had acted to set his heart aflame with burning zeal and fiery love, and he couldn’t take it.  It was too much, too daring: to entrust one’s heart to a man walking to his death, to one who calls us to a love as brilliant as his, a love that would love unto death, a love the darkness could not overcome, but could not comprehend either.  So he trades it in, for lamps and torches, barely enough to put the darkness at bay long enough to stumble to the garden of betrayal.


Peter, at least Peter would be loyal!  But he seeks to make an exchange too, a subtler one, and maybe even more dangerous because of that.  He would have his Lord shirk the cup the Father has poured him, refuse obedience to being His loving Son, turn away from Love, resorting to violence in place of loving self-gift, refuse to be the Lamb to be slain for us.  And his choices make choices, as so often choices do.  He finds himself confronted in the courtyard by a relative of his victim.  Jesus can’t be justly convicted of anything, but Peter can.  So, he evades.  He lies.  He exchanges the truth for a lie.  He exchanges a relationship of Love with Truth incarnate for violence, cowardice, temporary safety and a lie.

The crowd make their exchange too, making their request for Barabbas in place of Christ: an insurgent in place of the font of true liberation.  Pilate cares more about being a Friend of Caesar, a political honor he’d connived his way to, than the one who “calls us friends.”  Does he have something of an inkling, when he insists that Jesus’ titulus be inscribed “King of the Jews” – multilingual for the King of the Universe?  If so, he, and the crowd he lets himself be beholden to, replace the king who could save them with Tiberias Caesar.  A despot.  A despot that might have them killed if they displease him, but the chance for medium term safety doesn’t look much better by aligning with this Jesus.  They trade short-term safety for Eternal Life as beloved friends of the King of Kings.

And how about us?  What exchanges do we make?  And how do we let Jesus bring us back from them?  We’re here, because we don’t want to make exchanges.  We want our world illumined by Christ, not replacement torches and lamps.  We want to embrace the Father’s Love and Truth that Christ is, but we do what we don’t want to do, and find lies tempting our lips.  We want to pray “Thy Kingdom Come!” and mean it with all our hearts, but we still find it within ourselves to hold back, to not want Jesus to reign in our hearts, to rule us.  There are so many other drumbeats that bid our feet march in step with their tone, that promise temporary relief, easy love, that shirk the cup, and fall short… don’t lead to resurrection glory.

We want to cling to Christ, but where is He?  We know, he’s in heaven and he’s gone to prepare a place for us, and we know the Way: that He is the Way!  But that can seem so distant.  So, on the cross, he gave us what need.  He restores us to life, in his very death.

Mary and the Beloved Disciple must have felt so alone at the foot of that cross, however physically close they were to each other, or to Christ.  So, from the cross, he forges communion.  He bids them behold each other, and behold each other as kin.  And they receive one another.  The Word of God came into the world, but his own did not receive Him.  Now, the world has changed.  Now, these two receive each other.  And we’re called to too.  We’re called to behold each other, behold each other as kin.  Because that’s what Church is.  We don’t live it fully, even as Jesus prays continually that we might, but we are given to each other to show the world what love means, as Christ has shown us.  We’re given to each other to be the sacrament of Christ’s presence in the world, to be restored to life.

And that’s hard, because we still have it within ourselves to hold back.  We don’t have Christ’s eyes of compassion.  We are still plagued by fear, isolation, enmity, sin.  So, Christ keeps acting to draw us out of that and into communion, and in his very death he hands over the Spirit.  It is completed.  We are filled with Christ’s own Spirit, his breath, that he gave up that we might learn to breathe anew.  And from his side flows water to cleanse us, water poured out in baptism, water that gives us life.  Just as Eve received her life from Adam’s side, we receive our new life from Christ’s.  Not taken in his sleep, but lovingly given: breath, side… given in love for us, to show us what love means and saturate us with fuel for that fire.


Breath, spirit, side, water… and blood.  Blood poured out for us.  Blood present to us every time the sacrifice on Golgotha is re-presented to us in the sacrifice of the Mass.  He is not distant from us!  This act of love becomes a banquet to which we are invited every day of the year; every day but this day.  This day, when our Lord offers himself, body, blood, soul and divinity, in the reserved sacrament, the fruits of yesterday’s Mass, the Mass of his Last Supper, when he got down on his knees, raised us up, and washed our feet.


And it works.  Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus come out of the darkness of secret discipleship and act courageously for Christ.  It works!  What is Christ working in us?  The good news needn’t wait till tomorrow.  The good news is what wonders he’s wrought from the cross; how, in his death, he restores us to life.  Crux ave, spes unica!  Hail the Cross, our only hope.

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