Sermon for Good Friday: Solemn Liturgy
“It is finished”
Yes. “It is finished.” And yet, in another way it is never finished. What is finished? All that belongs to the reconciliation of God and man through Christ’s atoning sacrifice. What is never finished? That reconciliation in us is a life-long project; it is only finished in us when we are finished and gathered to Christ. Here we are a work in process. The process is about our continuing efforts to realize who we are in Christ in our lives. Our justification, the truth of our being, is fully and perfectly in Christ; not so in us. For us there is the constant struggle to realize in ourselves the reconciliation between God and man in Christ.
Central to that constant struggle is what belongs to the Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday, namely our contemplation of the Cross and our hearing, as it were, the lamentations of Christ, his words to us about the meaning of sin and grace, the “reproaches.” Our Solemn Liturgy has four parts: first, the liturgy of the Word beginning with the general confession but no absolution, the Good Friday anthems (BCP, p. 173), the Good Friday Collects, Psalm 22, a Lesson from Isaiah 50. 4-10, the Salvator Mundi, the Epistle reading from Hebrews, and then the Passion according to St. John; second, the Solemn Intercessions; third, the Reproaches of Christ to us in the words of the Lamentations of Jeremiah in which we contemplate our betrayals of God’s love; and fourth, our communion with the dead Christ. On Good Friday, there is no absolution nor any celebration of the Holy Eucharist; there is only communion through what was consecrated and kept from Maundy Thursday. On Good Friday, we identify with Christ in his death for us.
All pretty somber and serious, and rightly so. In the context of our suffering world where there have been and continue to be an escalating number of deaths through the Covid-19 outbreak, the Good Friday service allows us to place our suffering world, and the deaths of so many, in the sufferings of Christ. He suffers even unto death, Why? That love may accomplish what belongs to the truth of our humanity as reconciled with God.
“It is finished,” Jesus says. It is the last word of Christ on the Cross in John’s Gospel. It signals a kind of end, a sense of accomplishment, of purpose realized. It signals atonement. All that belongs to the reconciliation of God and man is accomplished. Such is the divine love which seeks our good, our salvation, our completeness. Yet, in another sense, love is never finished. Divine love is ever active and never static. God is actus purus, pure act, as the theologians say. Love is ever in motion. That eternal motion is about the constant love of the Son for the Father in the bond of their mutual and indwelling love, the love of the Trinity.
And that love is what we seek to realize more and more in our lives even as we know only too well that our sins constantly beset us. There is no end, it seems, to our sins. But the good news of Good Friday which makes this day “Good Friday” is that nothing, absolutely “nothing can separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ.” Knowing that means striving to live it in our lives with one another. Such a striving is for God in us. It is “thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” What makes that prayer so powerful is Christ’s word to us on the Cross. “It is finished.” It is all there in him and so we can seek it for us in our lives. That is our constant challenge: to realize in ourselves what has been accomplished for us in Christ’s sacrifice. Such is the cross in our lives. We seek to bear witness to what he has done for us.
“It is finished”
Fr. David Curry
Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday, April 10th, 2020
Posted not preached owing to the Covid-19 outbreak