Sermon for Good Friday

“They shall look on him whom they pierced”

What else is there for us to do but to look on him whom we have pierced? It is simply the business of this day, the day which is called profoundly Good Friday. Somehow it is all our good to contemplate Christ crucified.

The intensity of the Passion reaches its crescendo in the services of Good Friday in such things as the meditations upon The Seven Last Words of the Cross and in The Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday. The spectacle of the Christ crucified is fully before us and if Holy Week means anything at all it is about finding our place in the events of the Passion, finding our humanity in all of its disarray in the crowd at Calvary. That is itself something profoundly spiritual. To see something about ourselves through the witness of the Scriptures in the figures who are part of the terrible pageant of the Passion. How can we do that?

It requires the capacity to be convicted about sin. Not a happy topic, perhaps, and certainly one which we do everything to ignore, mostly by ignoring Church where the Scriptures are proclaimed and the Sacraments celebrated. Our communities are filled with those who pass by with utter indifference, unaware of what happens here. No doubt, that is partly our fault in not making it clearer as to what the Church is really all about. It isn’t community service and communal socializing except in so far as such things make visible the love of God and our communion with Him which is the ground and basis of all our labours and life with one another.

The good news of Good Friday is that we look upon ourselves and are convicted of sin. Why is that good news? Because you can only do that if you know love. Only the love of God makes it possible to know the human situation. And to talk about love is equally meaningless without acknowledging sin. In a way, we really only know love through sin.

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Good Friday

The collects for today, Good Friday, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY God, we beseech thee graciously to behold this thy family, for which our Lord Jesus Christ was contented to be betrayed, and given up into the hands of wicked men, and to suffer death upon the cross; who now liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

ALMIGHTY and everlasting God, by whose Spirit the whole body of the Church is governed and sanctified: Receive our supplications and prayers, which we offer before thee for all estates of men in thy holy Church, that every member of the same, in his vocation and ministry, may truly and godly serve thee; through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Epistle: Hebrews 10:1-25
The Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ according to Saint John
The Gospel: St. John 18:33-19:37

St. Peter's, Walpole St. Peter, CrucifixionArtwork: Crucifixion, stained glass. St. Peter’s Church, Walpole St. Peter, Norfolk, England. Photograph taken by admin, 3 October 2014.

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