rain and the rhinoceros


Reflections on Good Friday
March 20, 2008, 2:52 pm
Filed under: Good Friday, Herbert McCabe, Meditations

See also my previous post: Reflections on Holy Thursday
I hope to turn this into an Easter series with posts for the remainder of the holy days, but I can’t make any promises. This one is posted early because I won’t have time to post it tomorrow.

Recently, I have heard a lot of complaints about so-called penal substitutionary atonement. Now it is important to remember that there is no one way to understand “the atonement” or God’s saving work in Christ. Certainly, some ways of understanding the atonement are better than others. However, I do suspect that penal substitutionary atonement is usually misrepresented and not all that well understood. There may very well be problems with this “theory,” but probably all theories of atonement are problematic precisely because they are always theories. God’s saving work in Christ is truly a mystery. This is not to say that we cannot reflect on it or attempt to articulate what it might be about, but our language and our analogies will always fail. To be sure, we can say that God in no way punishes his Son. The Father is nothing but “well pleased” with the Son. I think that we can also say that the Father is not interested in divine child abuse. Yet, the Father “knew” the Son would be killed because he knew his Son was entering a crucifying world, a world that rejects God. As Herbert McCabe notes, “The mission of Jesus from the Father is not the mission to be crucified; what the Father wished is that Jesus should be human…And this is what Jesus sees as a command laid on him by his Father in heaven; the obedience of Jesus to his Father is to be totally, completely human” (93). Thus, Jesus was crucified because he was human not because the Father planned to have him killed for some greater cause. We must always remember and never shy away from the fact that we crucified Jesus not the Father. We have created a world that is characterized by suffering and death -by crucifixion. We must not become confused on this point. God never causes suffering. God is always God for us, always for human flourishing, always for love.

Jesus was killed not because God wanted him to be killed but because we wanted him to be killed. He posed a challenge to the ruling powers, to the establishment and to each individual and he continues to do so -and we continue to respond by crucifying him. The cross signifies humanity’s rejection of God and, indeed, of all humanness. It reveals the depth of our sin. Jesus pours his heart out and quite literally his blood for the sake of humanity. This is an invitation to love, to enter into a relationship with a person who is love.

Crucifixion-3-Lowf

The cross reveals that each of us reject God, we reject love daily, this is what is meant by original sin. This rejection is built into the very structures of the society we have constructed. As McCabe states, “So the cross shows up our world for what it really is, what we have made of it. It is a world in which it is dangerous, even fatal, to be human; a world structured by violence and fear. The cross shows that whatever else may be wrong with this or that society, whatever may be remedied by this or that political or economic change, there is a basic wrong, persistent through history and through progress: the rejection of the love that casts out fear, the fear of the love that casts out fear, the fear that without the backing of terror, at least in the last resort, human society and thus human life cannot exist” (97).

It is important to note that Jesus refuses to take up arms, to resort to violence in the building of his new society, the church, which is to be defined by self-giving love, forgiveness, and the sharing of life together. Instead, he trusts in the work of the Holy Spirit. Yet, he was killed. Jesus on the cross represents the failure of human life. The cross shows us the reality that all of our efforts to love, to struggle against the oppressors of this world, finally end in failure, in death. We continue to struggle just as Jesus did out of obedience and love, but even despite some gains we will continue to fall short. It is important to remember that whatever the political significance of Jesus’ death may be it did not transform the world. Killers continue to kill. Torturers continue to torture. The establishment continues to oppress the weak and marginalize the poor. McCabe notes that Jesus’ prayer to the Father is “to work through his failure” (100). “Before his death Jesus had tried, but in the end failed, to bring the Spirit of love to a small group of disciples; now through him the Father pours the Spirit through the world; by this the world is to be transformed into a community of love, the Kingdom of God” (100). Thus, the Father’s response to the prayer of Jesus is the resurrection.


7 Comments so far
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A lovely thoughtful post.
So we are not ‘in the dock’…?
We are not ’saved’ from hell if we accept the atonement of Jesus?

Please turn in your card carrying ”Men who proudly pisseth against the wall” membership immediately (and your son’s too!).

You are out!

Comment by Roger Flyer March 20, 2008 @ 3:41 pm

This is wonderful ry, there are too many points on which to focus, so good. The idea that Jesus’ main mission from the Father was to be human makes a lot of sense; the idea that it is Jesus’ failure to be accepted by the world, the subsequent prayer from Jesus, and the answer in the resurrection, is almost too much for words.

I also love the point that the Father knew that Jesus would be killed for two reasons

1. that he was love entering into the world which fears love and would kil it

2. he was becoming fully human, who die.

thanks for posting this, as i said, my response is not sufficient, but neither would a thousand pub chats be!

Comment by masonmusic March 20, 2008 @ 5:41 pm

I look forward to our next pub chat with Flyer and Mason!
When?
September in ST Stephen?

Comment by Roger Flyer March 20, 2008 @ 7:20 pm

wow. this is truly a beautiful post. I have never, ever heard anything like this approach to Easter and Jesus’ purposes on earth. Thank you so much for sharing it. I have a lot to think about now…

Comment by becks March 21, 2008 @ 12:09 pm

Ry-
I agree with becks and joel…truly a beautiful post and I love the way you think. Keep going deeper! You’re an Easter blessing.

Comment by Roger Flyer March 21, 2008 @ 3:39 pm

Ry- You’ve become a fantastic writer. This post is beautiful.

Comment by steph March 22, 2008 @ 10:19 am

“Jesus pours his heart out and quite literally his blood for the sake of humanity. This is an invitation to love, to enter into a relationship with a person who is love. The cross reveals that each of us reject God, we reject love daily, this is what is meant by original sin. This rejection is built into the very structures of the society we have constructed.”

…instructive and insightful. you’ve called humanity out, so truthfully, on our sad original sin. it is so imperative that we remember Jesus and what he lived for. i love this post, thank you for your fabulous reflection/life-altering blog about easter.

Comment by marciasig March 23, 2008 @ 12:15 am



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