2413AFC032924 – Who has done this? – ← 😊 PODCAST LINK
The Road to Jerusalem Series #7
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Today is Good Friday. Today I am thinking about what happened on Good Friday in Jesus’ life. I am thinking about how and why it happened. I am thinking how you, how I, how we might have connections to that moment of Jesus’ crucifixion. It is not a pleasant subject, but it has been laid on my heart since before Lent began to cover this topic, the connection between Love and human depravity.
I have stated previously that Jesus certainly was not the first to be crucified and definitely not the last. There is evidence of crucifixions and other forms of torture going back thousands of years – at least as far back as the sixth century BC – and they continued to be widespread until about the fourth century AD. Crucifixion is execution by torture. (← Check it out!) The process of dying can last for days in some instances. It is a method of execution specifically designed for maximizing pain while dehumanizing the victim. Jesus died in great pain in the dark, in the cold, totally alone, deprived of freedom, dignity, and even – at the end – without even the company of his Father. It is death by blood loss and suffocation so that the life force of both the body and the life force of Spirit are spilled out completely. But, despite all that, he died with Faith, Hope, and Love – even for us (etiam pro nobis). He died for you, for me, for us in F.A.I.T.H., knowing that God would accept his Sacrifice, knowing that his Perfect Sacrifice was the only hope for reconciliation for the entire world, and he held that faith and hope because he gave up everything he was because of Love for God and for us. He stretched out his hands between Heaven and Earth, to embrace a tortuous death, and gave us back our humanity, which is our Oneness with our Creator.
Torture is a gruesome, evil, deliberate act of inflicting pain and suffering for the purpose of coercing, terrorizing, or punishing enemies. Sometimes it is also a form of personal gratification. My personal belief is that the Crucifixion Squads the Romans used were comprised of men – usually a team of four soldiers and one Centurion – who enjoyed their work immensely. Execution by torture is mentioned in many ancient histories of empires and nations including some in the Bible. Crucifixion is one of the cruelest forms of execution. There are others that fall into that category of extreme cruelty, but they are so gruesome I cannot mention them here. There is no civilization, no nation, or no empire that has not employed torture at some time in its history. Does that seem remarkable, or odd, or inaccurate? It is none of those things.
All of us have the capacity for inhumane treatment of others. That is why inhumane acts are so prevalent throughout history, even today in Mass shootings and in suicide by cop. I’m not really a history freak, but I do explore history a lot, and in every history of humankind there are examples of torture. It’s not always horrific like crucifixion, but it is always dehumanizing. That is the ultimate purpose of torture, to dehumanize an enemy whether it is a single person, a class of persons (like slaves or enemy soldiers for example), or an entire nation (like a pogrom – so-called “ethnic cleansing”). Think of it: Uganda, Rwanda, Eastern Europe – Guantanamo, Russia, China, Japan, and the United States (on “foreign” soil). There was horrific torture in all of those places in the 20th century!
“What makes you think that’s part of my make-up?” you ask. Beloved, we are human. We can get angry and strike in anger. We can hold a grudge. (↔ Learning Link) We can think hateful thoughts. We can get carried away with punishment, mistaking it for “correction.” We can be unloving and unforgiving. We can curse a loved one. We can strike out at another for the most foolish reasons. “But that is not as atrocious as torture! It’s just that we are human.” Look at what Jesus said about many other things that are “merely human.”
“You have heard it said that …” In Matthew 5:21-48, Jesus tells us that fulfilling the Law isn’t the answer. Hating your brother is equivalent to murder. Lusting after someone is equivalent to adultery. Lusting after a certain thing is idolatry. Swearing by or about anything is blasphemy which comes from Satan, and is not from God. Only God-given self-control centered in compassionate commitment to morality prevents us from becoming brutal, ghastly, and capable of being inhumane. It is possible, even probable, that most earthlings committed to morality will never, ever do anything as monstrously cruel as torturing another earthling for any reason; but the germ for it is there in our sinfulness, and it is a mark of meekness to recognize it. It is an appalling aspect of human nature. Jesus knew that. He knew what would happen to him. He knowingly, willingly, totally surrendered to ignominious, cruel, tortuous execution on a cross. He did that because of what has been behind every single topic we’ve covered this Lent. He did it for Love.
“Greater love has no man than this, …” Look at John 15:9-17. Click on the link and read the passage. That is what was at the core of every study we have submitted in the Lenten Series. God is Love and that Love is perfected in Jesus’ sacrifice and conveyed to us in his Resurrection through our participation in the Holy Eucharist. It is that Love, and only that Love, which makes being a humane earthling possible. Only because of the Love of God, manifested in Christ Jesus, can we be caring, kind, gentle, meek, humble, compassionate, charitable, benevolent, good, and holy. “There is no other way?” you ask. No, there is no other way. Not so interested in being a Christian because religions bum you out? It doesn’t matter. It is still because of God’s Love and Christ’s death and Resurrection that you and I have the capacity to be all those wonderful, Godly things. “How could there have been good people who were wonderfully humane before Christ, and how can people today be all of those things and more without being Christians?” Because of God’s Covenant of Love which begins and ends in the Eternal Love of God given to us in Jesus by the ministry of the Holy Spirit. It is Love that saves me, saves you, saves us from the evil that has consumed every soul that devised and committed any kind of sin – including torture. Whatever goodness might manifest in others who are not Christians comes from the Manifest Grace of God in Christ Jesus. That is why Christ commands us to Love one another (↔ Music Link). Through The Word, we are present in his sacrifice 24/7/365. (↔ Music Link) Live and Love as He Lives and Loves, and we will know his return.
When you listen to the reading of The Passion, think of Love. It is the Greatest Love Story Ever Told. (↔ Music Link)
Look at him. He did that for us. He did all of that for all of us. He did it because he Loves us so much more than we can possibly comprehend. He can do that because he alone is Love.
“If today you hear is voice,” (↔ Music Link) Jesus is inviting you to share his Joy. If you have not accepted Christ as your personal savior, pray this short prayer from your heart and Jesus will answer it. If you already know the Lord and have found Peace and Joy in his presence, pray this prayer to recommit and reconsecrate your life to him, so that your J.O.Y. may be complete.
Jesus, I realize now that you are God’s Only Begotten Son. I know you chose to die in my place for the forgiveness of my sins. Thank you for loving me so much. I want to love you that much, too, and I claim you as my personal Savior. I give you my heart, my life, my soul, my all. I ask you to be in my life forever. Bless me with your Presence, and send your Holy Spirit to pray with and for me so my faith in you becomes permanent and real. I accept your love, your forgiveness, and your Salvation. AMEN
Remember, saying this prayer or any other prayer will not save us. Only believing in Jesus Christ, His finished work on the Cross is there and real and done for us, and his Resurrection into Glory can save us from the wages of our sins. Who has done this? WE have joined the crowd that cried out crucify him crucify him!, and we do so with every unrepented sin. Amazingly, God even blesses unrepentant sinners – they are not our enemies; ha-Satan and his minions are everyone’s enemies, but on an earthling plane just remember Matthew 5:44-45 – 44 But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45 so that you may be children of your Father in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the righteous and on the unrighteous. If they can see the Jesus in us, it is because we can see Jesus in them. Who has done this? Us. No? Then we must keep trying to let Jesus to do this in us because he did this for us.
Whatever, whenever, wherever, whoever, however,, forever —
at your service, Belovéd!
Please pray with us here at Share-a-Prayer.
We did that. We were there.
Unless otherwise indicated, all scripture passages are from the New Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (NRSVCE) New Revised Standard Version Bible: Catholic Edition, copyright © 1989, 1993 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Biblical languages inserts from Bible Hub (Bible Hub: Search, Read, Study the Bible in Many Languages) Visit at http://biblehub.com
Aloha Friday Messages by Charles O. Todd, III is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License