Good Firday Small Even the most non-liturgical Christians tend to recognize this day, Good Friday, as a special day. Some independent groups will do everything within their power to ignore it but even the big non-denominational churches will often celebrate Good Friday and Easter. I do find it more than curious that they pick and choose the days they want to celebrate and say the rest is neither important nor beneficial. This underscores, again, the radical anti-traditional nature of some evangelical Christianity. I grew up in this kind of faith but long ago began a journey away from it to where I now enter into Holy Week with great solemnity and deep joy. It has made a significant difference in my life I assure you.

The celebration of our Lord’s passion on the cross is held in the afternoon of this day, Good Friday. The common texts used for this occasion are Isaiah 52:13–53:12, Hebrews 4:14–16, and Hebrews 5:7–9, as well as the passion narrative from the Fourth Gospel. More liturgically defined churches will include ancient prayers of petition and a communion service. (The Catholic Church does not have a Mass on this day but does venerate the cross!) From the thirteenth century until 1955 only the priest received communion. Catholics are obligated to receive Eucharist during the Easter season, which in the U. S. is defined as the period between Ash Wednesday through Trinity Sunday, which is the Sunday after Pentecost. This obligation was established by the Lateran Council IV in 1215. The sad fact is that the majority of Catholics seem to ignore this practice in whole or in part, though multitudes more will then celebrate Good Friday and Easter. Confessions will increase during this time but the majority of Catholics in America still do not practice confession and reconciliation seriously.

Lent ended yesterday with the Eucharist. Today is the first day of the Holy Triduum, the holiest three days in Christian history. Today we remember the crucifixion of our Lord.

Crucifixion simply refers to putting one to death by nailing them to a wooden cross. It was a Roman form of capital punishment, likely meant to deter crime through a horrific form of death and dying. A body was impaled on a stake, a gibbet, and publicly exhibited so all could see the horror. Jews have generally found this part of the Christian story the hardest point to absorb since the Old Testament speaks specifically of the curse of God being as one hung upon a tree. But some early Jewish followers of Jesus interpreted his cross as divinely given victory over death. Here the power of light shines through the grim darkness of this occasion.

Good Friday is a very special day for Christians who see it as an appointed way to remember the death of their Savior in the flow of normal time and the liturgical calendar. This is why most Christians will worship Christ on this special day. I will solemnly join them at the cross of Christ my Lord. I hope you will too.

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Comments

  1. Joe Heschmeyer April 2, 2010 at 9:30 am

    I couldn’t have said any of this better myself. You’re positive you’re not Catholic? (Said in the most positive way possible, of course).
    Joe.

  2. Ed Holm April 2, 2010 at 9:43 am

    John I pray that you will have the most contemplative and life changing Triduum and that you will have a Blessed Easter to celebrate new life within you. God Bless.

  3. Susanne Barrett April 2, 2010 at 12:31 pm

    The Good Friday liturgy is one of the most beautiful and solemn. At the evangelical church we attend as a family, Good Friday is sometimes observed with a service, and sometimes not. Once we did a “nailing”: writing down a sin on a slip of paper and nailing it to a large wooden cross. The echoes of the hammer blows brought tears to our eyes–our Lord suffered THIS for us? But I don’t understand the “hit or miss” services–sometimes but not always remembering our Lord’s sacrifice on Good Friday.
    I also worship at a small Reformed Episcopal parish on weekdays, and they celebrate the Holy Triduum with a footwashing for Maundy Thursday, veneration of the Cross on Good Friday, and a candle-lit procession for Holy Saturday Vigil. I find the Triduum services so deeply meaningful, and they consist almost entirely of Scripture passages–long ones. To cry “Crucify him! Crucify him!” and “May his blood be on us and on our children!” (Mt 27:25) with the crowds as we read the trial and crucifixion of our Lord aloud together is so convicting.
    The rejection of “tradition” in the evangelical church stymies me, especially when so many of the “traditions” are based in Scripture. It’s a case of “throwing out the baby with the bathwater” and is a continual source of sadness for me in seeing how much richness and grace the evangelical church misses in rejecting “tradition.”
    Sigh.
    I have so much enjoyed your entire series, John. I haven’t had time to comment, but everything you’ve written over the last three weeks gets a resounding “Amen!” from me. πŸ™‚ Thanks so much for being a voice of reason and truth, of peacemaking and bridge-building in the church.
    Wishing you and your readers a blessed remembrance of Christ Jesus during these holiest of Holy Days,
    Susanne πŸ™‚

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