Good Friday
When Jesus Meets Us Where We Are
Among the treasures I found in my late mother’s library is a book of sermons for Holy Week, written by William Dau, the first president of Valparaiso University as a Lutheran institution. It bears a stamp indicating that it was part of my grandfather’s library in the 1940’s – years he served as a pastor in Waterloo, Ontario. From the preface, we learn that Dau wrote these sermons for a series of noon-time Lenten services that were held at the Woods Theater in the Chicago Loop in 1919-1920, six years before he would begin his service at Valpo.
I settled in to read, enchanted by the thought that my grandfather held the same book when he was about my age and read the work of someone connected to us here at Valpo.
In the second-last sermon, “My Pilot” – a meditation on the events of Good Friday – Dau contemplates the blessings of the death of Christ,
[Jesus] has entered the dark unknown that lies ahead of everyone of us, and has filled its shuddering gloom with His presence. To Him earth’s pilgrims rightfully look for direction and support as they set their foot into the mysterious valley which lies just at the end of their journey. He alone is recognized as the experienced guide that can bring the weary wanderer safely home. 1
Perhaps Dau’s observation struck me because, since my mother’s funeral (and in the context of COVID and the continuously tragic news from Ukraine), I’ve been thinking about mortality a lot. The thought that the death of Christ not only provides humanity with an atoning sacrifice for sin, but also gives us one who, in some way, accompanies us in our own experience of dying is welcome, given the inevitability of it all. But there’s more going on here than Jesus being a tour guide through death – like some mythical ferryman.
Andrew Root sees it this way:
When God perishes with Jesus, death and nothingness itself is filled with God’s being, surrounding it in love, turning it to serve God. …giving God’s very being to death, death cannot hold God. God enters time… through barren wombs (Genesis 20) and the cries of slavery (Exod. 3:9), but when the eternal enters through death (the impossible), death is taken into the eternal and life bursts forth.… And while the being of God experiences the fullness of death in the perishing Jesus, this God is eternal, raising the dead Jesus into the eternal. Through death, life springs. 2
The place where God meets us with life is precisely the place where life has become impossible for us. This insight from Scripture is echoed in interviews that Root describes with people who have had some experience with the reality of God in their lives. In every case, the awareness of divine grace came in times of life where all else was exhausted – where the possibilities of human flourishing were at an absolute dead end. It’s not just that Jesus meets us in his Good Friday. It’s that we meet Jesus in our own Fridays – our own worst Fridays.
Good Friday isn’t just a stop over on our way to Easter Sunday. It is the point of Easter Sunday.
April 6, 2022
Pr. Jim
1 Dau, W. H. T. 1920. He loved me, and gave Himself for me: for the quiet hour during Holy Week. St. Louis: Concordia Pub. House. p.71-72
2Root, Andrew. Christopraxis: A Practical Theology of the Cross. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2014. p.112.
Pastor Jim and Pastor Kate take turns writing weekly devotions for the Chapel of the Resurrection.
- Archives of Devotional Writings from our Pastoral Staff
- “HELP!”
- “Some Lent!”
- (Your vocation here) of people
- A call to courage for 2021
- A charming tale for over-achievers
- A Lesson On Beans … and Being
- A New Place
- A Point of Privilege
- A season of anticipation
- A Time of Dust
- Acquiring a peaceful spirit
- Advent = Hope
- All will be well
- Anastasis: the Greatest Story of God’s Saving Power
- Another kind of darkness
- Are we willing to cross the road for one another?
- As if we needed a reminder
- Beacons of hope
- Better Together
- Blessings As You Go
- Borderlands
- Can we learn to be happy?
- Carrying the COVID Cross
- Come and See
- Did Jesus really suffer?
- Doing without in a life of plenty
- Don’t miss this moment
- Exiles with Vision
- Fear not!
- Fear of the Lord
- Feeling at Home
- Finding Purpose in the Journey
- Finding Words for Times Like These
- Forgiving others – and ourselves
- Getting ahead with Jesus
- Getting down on Jesus’ level
- Getting through this together
- God is not overwhelmed
- Good Friday
- Grief & Graduation
- Have yourself a merry little Christmas — somehow
- Holy Week and Taking Out the Trash
- Holy Week: The aid station late in the semester
- Hopes & Dreams vs Life in the Wilderness
- How do you keep from giving up hope?
- How glad we’ll be if it’s so
- I almost slipped
- Imagining Eternity
- In a time of uncertainty, these things are certain
- In everything, grateful
- In praise of plans B … C … D …
- In the midst of grief, God will bring life
- Is there such a thing as being too forgiving?
- It’s a Three Day Weekend!
- It’s In the Bag
- It’s What’s Happening
- Jesus among us
- Killing off our future selves
- Knowing a Good Thing When We See It
- Lessons in fire building
- Let there be light!
- Let us work for real wellness in our communities
- Life Is a Highway
- Lilies and leaves and whatever else is beautiful
- Living in the Present
- Naming our demons
- O Lord, you know I hate buttermilk
- Of Fear and Failure
- On Christian Unity: When we’re not one big happy church
- On the Bucket List
- On the day after the night before
- Overwhelmed
- Persistent and Extravagant
- Pray and Let God Worry
- Praying for Reconciliation
- Preparing for the world to be turned rightside up
- Recovering from an Epic Fail
- Reformation calls for examination
- Remembering among the forgetful
- Rest
- Rest is Holy
- Right where we are
- Seeing beauty in brokenness
- Signs of Love
- Starting Small
- Still in the storm
- Surprisingly Simple: Breathe!
- Taking a Break from the Relentless
- Talking ourselves into it
- Thankfulness leads to joyfulness
- The Art of Holy Week
- The Funny Business of Forgiveness
- The Greatest of These is Love
- The Magi: Exemplars of Faith and Learning
- The Power of Small Conversations
- The Trouble with Mammon
- The Power of Taking a Sabbath
- The Spiritual Gift of Hindsight
- This can’t be done alone
- To be known
- Too.Much.
- You might be a Lutheran if…
- You will be in our prayers this summer of 2020
- Ventures of which we cannot see the ending
- WWJD? We already know
- Walking in the Light of Jesus’ Resurrection
- We had hoped
- We’re on a mission from God
- What do you do with your anger?
- What good is a shepherd?
- What is your base reality?
- What to do after you find your voice
- What to do on the day after
- What we know and what we don’t know
- When bad things happen
- When God uses something terrible for good
- When heaven & earth click
- When joy and sadness live together
- When stress overwhelms
- When the promise of resurrection is hard to believe
- When you offer up your broken cup
- When we are moved
- Where God will be found
- Where is the good shepherd carrying you?
- Wilderness Journeys
- Won’t you be my neighbor?
- Year-end time management: Keeping the main thing the main thing
- Your Valpo roots will help you grow into your future