Good Friday
Today is the day
we remember how our Lord, innocent though He was, was put to death by His
enemies. Today is the day our Saviour is nailed to the cross because those whom
He had come to save rejected Him. Today is the day when His thousands of
followers and even His most intimate friends abandoned Him and leaving just
four women and a man to accompany Him during this horrible ordeal. Today, the
Word of God is silenced on the cross - no farewell speech to encourage or
inspire His followers. And yet we Christians call this day “Good Friday” and
our Eastern brethren have an even more audacious sounding name for it - the
Great Friday.
Why on earth would
Christians refer to this Friday as “good”?
It’s called Good
Friday because even while powerful men were conspiring to kill the Son of God,
God Himself was acting to save the world from itself, once and for all. Even
while the world’s authorities were conspiring to perpetrate history’s greatest
evil, God was working to bring about history’s greatest good.
Yes, we Christians
have not made a great blunder in naming today as Good Friday. It isn’t a
misnomer. Far from a mistake, our Lord’s death and sacrifice on the cross is
God’s greatest achievement, His most prized trophy.
Today is good
because on the cross, our Lord suffered so that we would not have to suffer
eternally. Yes, we are not saying that Christians are insulated from suffering
because of what Christ did. Christians are no strangers to suffering. It’s part
of our DNA. In fact, to be a Christian means to deny ourselves and take up our
crosses in imitation of our Lord. But all suffering in this life, no matter how
unbearable it may seem, is only temporary. Suffering has a shelf life because
of what our Lord did today.
What Christ did is
that He “traded places” with us. He lived the sinless life that we should live,
and died the death that we deserve to die. He took our guilty record, died for
it, and offers us His perfect record in return. That is why Saint Paul declared
that “there is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus”
(Rom 8:1).
Today is also not
just a good day but a great day because by His death on the cross, our Lord
Jesus reconciled us to the Father. Long before social distancing became the
norm, man had already socially distanced himself from God by our sins. It is
not God who had distanced Himself from us; it is not God who had abandoned us.
It is we who have abandoned Him through sin. Because of our sins, we have
alienated ourselves from God and others, but Jesus saves us from our sins in
order to mend those relationships. The reconciling powers of Christ will cause
all relational barriers to be torn down, including the barriers of ethnicity
and nationality (Rev 5:9-10).
Finally because of
the cross and the resurrection, we have hope for the future. As you all know,
Good Friday is not a stand-alone feast. The story doesn’t just climax and end
with Jesus dying on the cross on Good Friday. The real ending is found on
Easter when Jesus will burst forth from the tomb, break the shackles and prison
of death and rise again so that now we may have new life. With every darkening
which seems to come with Good Friday, there is the new dawn of Easter.
Though Christ’s
death has defeated the powers of death, suffering and evil, we must still wait
for the day when He will return to put all these enemies under His feet. Until
then, we must hope and believe that the victory is already His, that death is
not the end, that suffering will not have the final say. Mission accomplished.
This pandemic or any other calamity, natural or otherwise will have no hold
over us. The work of Christ is complete. From the cross, He assures us, “It is
accomplished.”
It does seem odd
to refer to anybody’s death as “good.” Yet, God’s good plan is often counterintuitive:
As Jesus says, “He who finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life
will find it; “the first shall be the last and the last shall be first” (Mark
10:31). And yes, through the “good” death of God’s Son, humanity can receive
new life, abundant life. He has given us eternal life that will never be
defeated by any infection, calamity or even death.
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