Easter Requires Friday
The Joy of the Cross
Luke 23: 26-49
During the recent Paschal Season, I like so many of us was anxious to get to Easter Sunday morning and celebrate the resurrection of my Lord who was tortured, humiliated, and finally crucified. Hearing from many pastors and faithful mentors that this was the most important day of the Christian year, I readily, even enthusiastically, rushed past the terrible and troubling scenes of Friday reluctant to look too long upon a cross that symbolized sin, evil, death, and guilt. It was simply too hard. It was much easier to rejoice at the empty tomb than to stand at the foot of a cross inhabited by an innocent man, occupied on my behalf.
But today, after many years struggling to find an answer to why death was necessary to remedy the brokenness of man, I now come to Good Friday with peace in my heart and an overwhelming sense of gratitude and grace. It is the cross that hammers home to me the depth of love God has for me and indeed, for all mankind. It is at the foot of the cross I come to the realization that the Just God in heaven required the debt of sin to be paid. And, I am a sinner! The debt I owed as a result of my rebellion, my spiritual arrogance, my denial would be paid. Now I come to the cross hearing Jesus pray on my behalf, “Father, forgive them …,” and as I look into his loving eyes, I linger. Moments later Jesus cries out, “my God, my God …,” and I am filled with indescribable remorse. Here he hangs with the burden of my sinfulness crying out to heaven and for the first time in all eternity, no one answers. My heart is crushed with unfathomable sadness. But as I wait, I hear him again call out to heaven, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.” Heaven is again attentive but something has changed. Now heaven is listening to me as well. Now the insurmountable divide between an unworthy soul like mine and the grace of God is bridged. It was bridged by a cross. I now can follow the sacrificed and soon to be risen Jesus into the arms of God.
I still run to the tomb. But finding it empty is not the joyful event it once was. At the cross I was enabled by grace to become a follower of Christ. As such, I will only pass through the tomb as did he. It is the cross that gives me hope and joy.









