Hebrews 10:16-25

"Good" Friday - Years A, B, C


Let us provoke one another toward forgiveness.

If we can learn obedience through suffering, can we learn glory through forgiveness? And what will we learn by forgiving suffering and suffering forgiveness?

http://www.kairoscomotion.org/lectionary/2004/april2004.html

 


 

Where there is forgiveness there is no need for a priest to offer sacrifice for sin.

Where boldness is needed to enter and receive forgiveness a priest is a helpful companion.

Whichever part of this cycle we are on at the present, the end result of the choices of we make is that of increasing love and good deeds. It is to this that we are willing to invest our lives so fully that we, too, would chose death over extension of life.

The principalities and powers, politics and economics, would constrain us to their ends. It is our sense of being new people that will lead us toward one another and beyond our constraints to better ways.

Remember that today is about forgiveness and reconciliation, not sacrifice, though that happens along the way.

http://www.kairoscomotion.org/lectionary/2005/march2005.html

 


 

Hebrews 10:16-25 or Hebrews 4:14-16; 5:7-9
Isaiah 52:13-53:12
Psalm 22
John 18:1-19:42

Persistence in the face of overwhelming sorrow (try reading the Thomas Covenant series by Stephen R. Donaldson) can lead to provocation to love and good deeds, anyway.

Overwhelming sorrow can also deaden us to the point of non-responsiveness. It can call forth intermediary rituals to disperse such sorrow that eventually become a barrier to experiencing the sorrow at all. At this point we cling to our ritual rather than face again that which overwhelms us, every time. Far better to be obedient than to wrestle, as did Jacob of old, with unknown forces.

Suffering does come, as does everything in its time. But here the suffering may be more in the eye of the beholder than the actor. We do come to an empathetic and cathartic experience of suffering, but one that tends to keep us captive to it rather than release us into a new freedom to accept oursuffering and not run from it.

We do not seem to find a way through suffering (a better conversation between Buddha and Jesus would help many a Christian and their congregation). It becomes a totem for us and we carry it around our necks and tattooed on our bodies. A cross becomes an ending spot for us rather than a beginning, everything is seen through its lens.

Note: None of this applies to the kinds of suffering we cause and ignore to the least among us. That kind of suffering has nothing to do with redemption.

http://kcmlection.blogspot.com/2007_04_01_archive.html

 


 

Whether following the United Methodist or Roman Catholic pericope, we have to deal with a reinstitution of a high priesthood as the only vehicle through which we can access G*D’s mercy. For some reason or other mercy cannot be mercy on its own, but only if earned by someone or another.

Mercy is understood to break all the rules for the presence of G*D. Mercy provokes us to additional acts of mercy. Against mercy there are no limitations other than our proclivity to ration and control a G*D careening out of control and being merciful beyond our capacity.

If Jesus can sympathize with weakness, there is no one who will be left out. Jesus learned this from a pagan, Melchizedek, a Syrophenician woman, unnamed, and each and every prophet. Whether we learn mercy from outside or inside a religious tradition, let us affirm our hope, participate in love and good deeds, encourage one another, and identify with those left out.

http://kcmlection.blogspot.com/2012/04/hebrews-1016-25-or-hebrews-414-16-57-9.html

 


 

Where there is forgiveness, there is no longer any offering for sin. The life of Jesus, and those he mentored, is merciful, forgiving. This is not just a momentary accomplishment, but a life-time achievement.

If you are not going to claim the power of forgiveness as a key key to the presence of G*D, there is nothing that Jesus’ death does that will substitute it for your responsibility to forgive.

Even here in the midst of a temptation to idolize crucifixion, we hear these strange and powerful words: “Let us provoke one another to love and good deeds.”

Jesus shows we can make it to and past the consequences of loving good deeds in the midst of a greedy and privileged culture. To claim any given moment of a nation to be the pinnacle of morality is an exercise in futility. Only a brief moment in time will reveal that the official history is but a cover for extending the current power structure one day more. The alternative history (read your Howard Zinn) always reveals a liberation rising from the grassroots to break through the cement (thank you Malvina Reynolds). We arrive at a better tomorrow by a whole series of sequential or persistent actions, not by protecting wealth and privilege with guns and armies.

Indeed, let us meet together in all our confusing and contradictory ways. Only in this time of meeting can we each provoke one another to love and good deeds. When we lose this connection, we lose our basic mission that has come at such a cost to so many.

Today reflect on this image I found in Korea. I’m told the dress is of a scholar and the cross is a backpack I saw farmers in the community using for their chores. Scholars and workers are crucified for the wealth and power of a few. Listen to both saying, “We can do better.” This provocation to love and good deeds is the call we need to hear. Mourn death, yes, but do better.

http://kcmlection.blogspot.com/2014/04/hebrews-1016-25-friday.html