“They All Abandoned Him”
Good Friday
April 10, 2020
12:00 noon Good Friday Liturgy with Adoration of the Cross
live-streamed at facebook.com/trinityashland
Trinity Episcopal Church
Ashland, Oregon
The Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.
Isaiah 52:13-53:12; Hebrews 10:16-25; Psalm 22; John 18:1-19:42
Isaiah 52:13-53:12; Hebrews 10:16-25; Psalm 22; John 18:1-19:42
One of the saddest elements of the passion stories is found in a line from Mark’s Gospel, repeated in Matthew’s, describing the disciples’ reaction to the arrest of Jesus, “And they all forsook him and fled” (Mark 14:50; cf. Matthew 26:56). All four Gospels agree that several of Jesus’ women disciples watched on from a distance as he suffered on the cross, and then sought to care for his body after his death. And John’s Gospel insists that the founder of that Gospel’s community, the beloved disciple, also stood by the cross with Jesus’ mother. But apart from that, all Jesus’ disciples abandoned him, including St. Peter, whose initial effort to follow Jesus ends in his denial in all four Gospels of even knowing him.
The fact is, the disciples had
always been skeptical of Jesus, and wary of his strange ways of thinking and
behaving. At turns in the Gospel stories of his life, they are “variously
enthralled, mystified, bemused, apprehensive, and confounded” (A Keeper of the Word: the Selected Writings
of William Stringfellow, ed. Bill Wylie Keller; Eerdmans: Grand Rapids,
1994, p. 394.)
Earlier, even when the disciples
seemed to be doing their best, they fail miserably. When Peter first
confesses Jesus as Christ, he immediately spoils the moment by arguing with
Jesus over what it means to be a Messiah, insisting that Jesus cannot suffer or
die, lest the kingdom not come. “Get behind me, Satan,” is Jesus’
response. Peter seems to be rehearsing for Good Friday.
We see it again and again. The
disciples go out, charged by Jesus to preach the arrival of the Kingdom and
heal the sick. Sometimes they succeed, but there are several stories
where they fail, and are gently chided by Jesus for their lack of trust in
God. Peter sinks in the waves as he tries to follow Jesus’
beckoning as he walks on the sea. They doubt Jesus’ care for them during
the tempest on the sea. The sons of Zebedee, James and John, try to set
themselves up with special places of honor beside Jesus, and all the other disciples
argue with them over it. They repeatedly misunderstand parables and
sayings of Jesus, even when he speaks in relatively clear terms. Even on
the evening of the last supper with Jesus, on Maundy Thursday, the disciples
are still arguing with each other over their relative rank.
Holy Week sees the problem condensed
and concentrated. The disciples’ acclamation of Jesus as the coming David
on Palm Sunday quickly turns into worry at what they see as his erratic acts,
the cursing of the fig tree, his act of protest in the Temple, his strange
declaration at their last meal together that the bread and wine are not the Passover’s
“Bread of Affliction” or “Cup of Blessing,” but rather his own body and blood,
broken and poured out for the many, that is, for all. By the time his
inner circle accompanies him to Gethsemane, they are exhausted, worn out, and
cannot even stay awake to prayer with him.
And these people were Jesus’ friends
and family! As William Stringfellow writes, “…if one goes no further than
this, there is a warning for people now in these New Testament reports of the
skepticism or incredulity of the disciples (and of Jesus’ family) despite their
intimacy with Jesus. This should be enough to render people wary of
huckster preachers or celebrity evangelists who assert that mere intimacy with
Jesus of an intense, private, or exclusive nature is faith. This is a
fascinating, tempting, simplistic, but unbiblical doctrine… [F]or all their
unique experience in the company of Jesus, the disciples did not believe him or
believe in him. What seems most surprising and crucial, furthermore, is
that some of this disbelief of the disciples persisted even after the
resurrection” (ibid.,
396-7.)
We are the disciples in these
stories. Their abandonment, incredulity, and obstinacy is ours.
How often do we let our fear keep us
from following Jesus’ call?
How often do we let our desire for
control and security, at least the semblance of control and security, make us
walk paths Jesus warns us against?
How often do we compartmentalize our
lives—faith and religion over here, and politics, economics, finances, social
status, and amusements over here?
Jesus was not broken and killed on
the Cross to pay a debt for us to some great Loan Shark in the Sky who has been
waiting to break our knees to punish us.
He did not bleed to death on the Cross to feed the lust of a
bloodthirsty Deity overwhelmed by wrath against us. Such a deity is not the loving Abba Jesus
taught us about.
Jesus had to die because he was
human, and human beings die, often by unfair brutality and unjustly. When the Word was made flesh and dwelt among
us, God took on all it means to be human.
And it is our sinful way of behaving that killed him.
Jesus died for our sins. He did not die to pay the punishment for our
sins; rather, he died because of our sin.
It was not from a Wrathful Deity that Jesus redeemed us, that is, bought
our freedom. Rather, it was from Sin itself, from the Accuser and from Wrath
writ large that he redeemed us. He did
this by taking on all it means to be human, in suffering at our hands, and by
overturning such Accusation and Oppression through being raised from Death
itself.
They all abandoned him. We all
abandon him. But he does not abandon us.
But that is why Jesus left us the
Spirit, and the Church. We help each
other back onto the Way. We encourage
each other to come back, to not abandon Jesus.
Jesus on the Cross gives the idealized Beloved Disciple charge of his
Mother, Mary. In so doing, he places us
all in her charge as well. And as he
asked us at the Last Supper, we must love and care for each other.
Let us pray.
We adore you, O crucified one, and
we bless you. Because of your Holy
Cross, you heal us from our brokenness and wickedness. Grant us in your compassion that we may
follow you on the Way of the Cross, and never abandon you. Amen
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