#Nobody’sgoingtoreadthisanyway
Why is today called “Good
Friday”? Today is the day when Christians remember the death of Jesus, the
Messiah, the Saviour of the World, so how could you call that good?
Is it a piece of reverse psychology? Like telling you NOT to
think of a yellow bus, so it ends up being the only thing you CAN think about? So don’t think about how horrific this form of
capital punishment was, or how unjust that an innocent man is being executed in
this way. Call it good.
Death on a cross is so grotesque, so incomprehensibly
horrifying it was intended as the ultimate deterrent. It was a crushing death: Physically,
the body weight pulls on the arms and compresses the chest, crushing the lungs so
it becomes impossible to breathe – that’s why the thieves on either side of
Jesus had their legs broken so they could no longer push themselves up to
support their weight & breathe, so they would die quicker. Emotionally crushing because of the shame,
culturally worse because it is the hallmark of the invaders, and religiously absolutely
anathema because “ cursed is he who hangs on a tree”, and a humiliating death
as they hung naked in full view of any gloaters, with the clothes they have
been stripped of being divided as spoils among the soldiers crucifying them. Glorying
in a cross, especially one with a figure on it, is like holding up an severed head would be today. A revolting concept – so how can that get somehow sanitised?
But Christianity is an upside down religion. The human race could
place their lives all along the scale of good and bad, from those who
deliberately go out of their way to cause pain & harm to others, through
the OK lives where people have neither a positive or negative affect on those
around them, to those who go out of their way to help others and change others’
lives for good, but what most folk don’t realise is that the Bible says it is
physically impossible to be good enough for God, no matter how hard you try.
Nobody could avoid some small slip. “All men have sinned.” That’s why God had
to provide the solution to sin Himself. So for Christians this day is good because
this is the day the Son of God took the punishment for all their sins, in fact
for the sins of everyone in the world, and died in their place so they could be
forgiven by God, so they could return to sharing their lives with God as He intended
humans to do in the first place. Jesus’ death was the turning point in history,
it is the focal point of eternity. It changes everything. Some philosophers would say it’s too
cosmically huge an event to comprehend, so how could it be that simple? But then,
aren’t many breath-taking concepts beautiful in their simplicity? As simple as 1-1=0? Jesus is the second Adam:
By the first sin came into the world, by the second sin is forgiven. Is it a
struggle to comprehend that?
The difference for those who have become Christians is that
Good Friday is neither a piece of psychological manipulation nor a
philosophical quandary, for them it’s simply REAL. When someone comes face to
face with the cross and admits they have sinned and hands that sin over to
Jesus, the Son of God, the absolute peace and complete relief they experience
as they are forgiven is beyond refute. Good Friday. The proof of the pudding is
in the eating - & this pudding is an upside down cake, a bit of a weird
concept, but the taste is out of this world.