Sermon for Good Friday
“Be it unto me according to thy word”
Mary’s word brings us ultimately to the Cross, to the words of the Crucified. The conjunction of the Annunciation with Passiontide heightens the interplay of Christ’s coming to us through her and Christ’s going from us through his death on the Cross. Her word connects to his words, his last words, we might say, and provides us with a critical and interpretative way of pondering them.
Mary’s word is her ‘yes’ to the divine will and purpose for our humanity. That is accomplished on the Cross in the humanity which Christ assumes from her. She is the true and pure source of Jesus’ humanity, soul and body, without which there can be no passion, no death, and no redemption. At the heart of the Passion is the same intensity of commitment and willingness to suffer for the will of God, for the will of the Father.
Good Friday. It is a paradox. Christ is crucified and dies – a kind of judicial murder and yet one in which we are all, in some sense or another, totally implicated. “Were you there when they crucified the Lord?” as the old spiritual so strongly, eloquently and rightly expresses it. A rhetorical question to which the answer, though unstated, is yes; we were there, we are in the story! That is the point without which there can be no good for any of us on this day. And yet, this darkness of the human heart on this day is the occasion for what is precisely called good. Good Friday.