Sermon for Good Friday
“Consummatum est – It is finished.”
Is it over yet? Perhaps I shouldn’t ask. But here is John’s last word from the Cross which says, “it is finished.” And yet we do more, you and I. After Christ dies, there is one final act of outrage, it seems, yet one more act. It belongs to our good on this day we call Good Friday to contemplate the ‘something more’ of our sinfulness and the even greater ‘something more’ of God’s love.
The dead Christ, having given up his spirit, still hangs upon the Cross; no longer dying but dead. The dead Christ is, then, pierced by the soldier’s spear. We have more to do, it seems, than just crucify him. We have more to do than just to kill him. It is, of course, perhaps, the customary procedure or test to see if he is dead but is it not also yet another gratuitous act of violence?
Yet God has far, far more than the more of our sins, something far, far more than the acts of our violence. And it begins here in this word of consummation, this word of finishing and ending. The great blessing of the Resurrection, Christ’s grand finale, we might say, already begins to flow out from the body of the broken-hearted Christ. Water and blood come forth from that stricken rock. It is the teaching of the Fathers that the sacraments of the Church flow out of the pierced side of the Crucified. Water and blood, the symbols of Baptism and the Holy Eucharist, flow out of the side of Christ crucified. There is at once the ‘something more’ of our sins – a final and unnecessary act, a violation of the sacred body – and the ‘something more’ of the act of God whose nature it is always to make something out of nothing. Creation and Recreation.