Today
is Good Friday, the day on which we reflect on Jesus’ crucifixion. While we
refer to it as Good Friday with the intention of focusing on Jesus’ death as
sacrificial for us, when we read the narratives of Jesus’ last hours, we can
find nothing really that good about that Friday. In fact, it is a very dark
story of Jesus at his most vulnerable period.
Portrayed
on stage, in film, and in church dramas, the passion story of Christ is fraught
with human agony and pain that is unequal to any story we read from the Scriptures.
And yet, despite the grotesque nature of the story, it is the focus of the
Gospels and indeed the entirety of the New Testament. But what are we to make
of this story?
This
is certainly a difficult question to answer for many reasons. For one thing,
the narratives of the Gospels tell the story in such vivid detail that we would
be hard pressed to sum up the story in a few simple words. For another, details
differ from Gospel to Gospel even though they agree at many points and all four
tell essentially the same narrative.
But
one thing is certain about the story: The early Christians felt the need to
tell this story, with all the details, no matter what it might have said about
Jesus, their King and Messiah.
While
we often look back on the crucifixion with a bit of sentimentality, probably
because we are influenced by the introspective idea that “Jesus died for me”,
the earliest Christians must have been out of their minds to portray their
Messiah as a vulnerable human who hung on a vile Roman cross. Yet, this is
exactly the story they told, without sanitizing it.
This
straightforward telling of the story by these earliest Christians is epitomized
very poignantly in Matthew and Mark through the only statement Jesus speaks
from the cross in these two Gospels. It is a prayer of protest in which Jesus recites
Psalm 22:1 and calls out in honest anger, “My God, my God, why have you abandoned
me?”
This
is a cry of naked vulnerability through which the Crucified One expresses a
deep resentment at the God who once called him the Beloved Son and the one in
which he had placed his complete faith. The intimacy that once characterized the
relationship of Father and Son was replaced by estrangement and abandonment,
and the vulnerability that Jesus experienced in his life was at its most
extreme in his death.
We
cannot deny the fact that on the cross Jesus felt abandoned by God. This was
real human emotion responding not only to the pain of death, but more
tragically, to the feeling of abandonment by the one in whom Jesus had placed
his full trust and obedience. Yet, Jesus’ cry is much more than a personal cry
to God for his own feelings of desertion. It is also a cry he voices for
vulnerable humans who also feel abandoned by God.
We
often wrongly assume that the Gospels were written primarily to record the
history of Jesus, so that future generations would have a biography of sorts about
this famous Jewish Rabbi. But a more important reason that these narratives
about Jesus were written was so that Jesus’ story would become the story through
which the vulnerable could find hope.
Thus,
Jesus’ cry from the cross is the cry he expresses on behalf of those who suffer
under the weight of a world system that produces inequality, injustice,
oppression, and violence that marginalizes the most vulnerable. It is a cry for
those who, like him, have been forsaken.
Yet,
even as his cry expresses abandonment, it also holds forth continued hope. For
one thing, Jesus continues to call out to God for he knows that it is only God
who can help him.
Moreover,
in quoting the first part of Psalm 22, Jesus may also be using a rabbinical
technique through which the one who quotes the beginning of the Psalm also invokes
the entirety of the Psalm. Though Psalm 22 begins with a cry of abandonment, it
ends in hope and victory.
But
perhaps more important for our understanding of why the Gospel writers included
this inauspicious statement voiced by the one who was crucified is the fact
that they are telling a story that does not end at crucifixion. The Jesus on
the cross, though experiencing vulnerability, death, and abandonment by God, will
be raised by God. The narrative of death and despair will transform into a
story of life and hope.